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What's O'Clock/Eleonora Duse

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4514718What's O'Clock — Eleonora DuseAmy Lowell
ELEONORA DUSE
I
Seeing's believing, so the ancient word Chills buds to shrivelled powder flecks, turns flax To smoky heaps of straw whose small flames wax Only to gasp and die. The thing's absurd! Have blind men ever seen or deaf men heard? What one beholds but measures what one lacks. Where is the prism to draw gold from blacks, Or flash the iris colours of a bird? Not in the eye, be sure, nor in the ear, Nor in an instrument of twisted glass, Yet there are sights I see and sounds I hear Which ripple me like water as they pass. This that I give you for a dear love's sake Is curling noise of waves marching along a lake.
II
A letter or a poem—the words are set To either tune. Be careful how you slice The flap which is held down by this device Impressed upon it. In one moment met A cameo, intaglio, a fret Of workmanship, and I. Like melted ice I took the form and froze so, turned precise And brittle seal, a creed in silhouette. Seeing's believing? What then would you see? A chamfered dragon? Three spear-heads of steel? A motto done in flowered charactry? The thin outline of Mercury's winged heel? Look closer, do you see a name, a face, Or just a cloud dropped down before a holy place?
III
Lady, to whose enchantment I took shape So long ago, though carven to your grace, Bearing, like quickened wood, your sweet sad face Cut in my flesh, yet may I not escape My limitations: words that jibe and gape After your loveliness and make grimace And travesty where they should interlace The weave of sun-spun ocean round a cape. Pictures then must contain you, this and more, The sigh of wind floating on ripe June hay, The desolate pulse of slur beyond a door, The grief of mornings seen as yesterday. All that you are mingles as one sole cry To point a world aright which is so much awry.
IV
If Beauty set her image on a stage And bid it mirror moments so intense With passion and swift largess of the sense To a divine exactness, stamp a page With mottoes of hot blood, and disengage No atom of mankind's experience, But lay the soul's complete incontinence Bare while it tills grief's gusty acreage. Doing this, you, spon-image to her needs, She picked to pierce, reveal, and soothe again, Shattering by means of you the tinsel creeds Offered as meat to the pinched hearts of men. So, sacrificing you, she fed those others Who bless you in their prayers even before their mothers.
V
Life seized you with her iron hands and shook The fire of your boundless burning out To fall on us, poor little ragged rout Of common men, till like a flaming book We, letters of a message, flashed and took The fiery flare of prophecy, devout Torches to bear your oil, a dazzling shout, The liquid golden running of a brook. Who, being upborne on racing streams of light, Seeing new heavens sprung from dusty hells, Considered you, and what might be your plight, Robbed, plundered—since Life's cruel plan compels The perfect sacrifice of one great soul To make a myriad others even a whit more whole.
VI
Seeing you stand once more before my eyes In your pale dignity and tenderness, Wearing your frailty like a misty dress Draped over the great glamour which denies To years their domination, all disguise Time can achieve is but to add a stress, A finer fineness, as though some caress Touched you a moment to a strange surprise. Seeing you after these long lengths of years, I only know the glory come again, A majesty bewildered by my tears, A golden sun spangling slant shafts of rain, Moonlight delaying by a sick man's bed, A rush of daffodils where wastes of dried leaves spread.