War and Love/The Blood of the Young Men
THE BLOOD OF THE YOUNG MEN
I
Give us back the close veil of the senses,
Let us not see, ah, hide from us
The red blood splashed upon the walls,
The good red blood, the young, the lovely blood
Trampled unseeingly by passing feet,
Feet of the old men, feet of the cold cruel women,
Feet of the careless children, endlessly passing …
II
Day has become an agony, night alone now,
That leisurely shadow, hides the blood stains,
The horrible stains and clots of day-time.
III
All the garments of all the people,
All the wheels of all the traffic,
All the cold indifferent faces,
All the fronts of the houses,
All the stones of the street—
Ghastly! Horribly smeared with blood-stains.
IV
The horror of it!
When a woman holds out a white hand
Suddenly to know it drips black putrid blood;
When an old man sits serene and healthy,
In clean white linen, with clean white hair,
Suddenly to know the linen foully spotted,
To see the white hair streaked with dripping blood.
V
O these pools and ponds of blood,
Slowly dripped in, slowly brimming lakes,
Blood of the young men, blood of their bodies,
Squeezed and crushed out to purple the garments of Dives,
Poured out to colour the lips of Magdalen,
Magdalen who loves not, whose sins are loveless.
O this steady drain of the weary bodies,
The beating of hearts growing dimmer and dimmer,
This bitter indifference of the old men,
This exquisite indifference of women.
VI
Old men, you will grow stronger and healthier
With broad red cheeks and clear hard eyes—
Is not your meat and drink the choicest?
Blood of the young, dear flesh of the young men?
VII
Ah, you women, cruel exquisite women,
What a love-fountain is poured out for you,
What coloured streams for your pleasure!
Go your ways, pass on, forget them;
Give your lips and breasts to the old men,
The kindly, impetuous, glowing, old men!
They who will love you indeed, indeed, dears,
Not as we do, drained of our blood, with weeping.
Sell yourselves, oh, give yourselves to the cripples,
Give yourself to the weak, the poor forgotten,
Give yourself to those who escape the torture
And buy their blood from the pools with weight of gold.
Give yourselves to them, pass on, forget us;
We, any few that are left, a remnant,
Sit alone together in cold and darkness,
Dare not face the light for fear we discover
The dread woe, the agony in our faces,
Sit alone without sound in bitter dreaming
Of our friends, our dear brothers, the young men,
Who were mangled and abolished, squeezed dry of blood,
Emptied and cast aside that the lakes might widen,
That the lips of the women might be sweet to the old men.
VIII
Go your ways, you women, pass and forget us,
We are sick of blood, of the taste and sight of it;
Go now to those who bleed not and to the old men,
They will give you beautiful love in answer!
But we, we are alone, we are desolate,
Thinning the blood of our brothers with weeping,
Crying for our brothers, the men we fought with,
Crying out, mourning them, alone with our dead ones;
Praying that our eyes may be blinded
Lest we go mad in a world of scarlet,
Dripping, oozing from the veins of our brothers.
January, 1918.