Class t Or)i 5^2 Book_.,^^-juXCL£) Copyright N°__/^i«_- COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. SONGS OF ARMAGEDDON AND OTHER POEMS BY GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERECK A GAME AT LOVE AND OTHER PLAYS NINEVEH AND OTHER POEMS THE HOUSE OF THE VAMPIRE CONFESSIONS OF A BARBARIAN THE CANDLE AND THE FLAME SONGS OF ARMAGEDDON AND OTHER POEMS SONGS OF ARMAGEDDON AND OTHER POEMS BY GEORGE SYLVESTER VIERECK NEW YORK MITCHELL KENNERLEY I9I6 COPYRIGHT 1916 BY MITCHELL KENNERLEY ii 0± PRINTED IN AMERICA JUN 21 1916 For Hearths Delight Night and Day Light My Way! Day and Night, Heart's Delight! CONTENTS THE BOOK OF ARMAGEDDON WILHELM II, PRINCE OF PEACE PAGE 3 THE IRON CHANCELLOR 5 THE GERMAN COUNTRY AMERICAN TO HIS ADOPTED 9 THE NEUTRAL IX ITALY — 1915 12 DEUTSCHLAND, LANDS DEUTSCHLAND, LAND OF ALL 14 THE HYMN OF ARMAGEDDON 19 SONG AGAINST NIPPON: TO HIRAM JOHNSON 22 THE BOOK OF THE DEAD THE CONQUEROR 27 HUERTA 29 ADOLPHUS BUSCH: AVE ATQUE VALE 30 CONTENTS THE BOOK OF HELEN AND MARGUERITE PAGE DR. FAUST'S DESCENT FROM HEAVEN 35 VENUS AMERICANA 39 LOVE IN A ZEPPELIN 41 A BALLAD OF SAINT VITUS 43 VENGEANCE 45 A VAGABOND 46 THE LOVE SEAL 47 PIERROT CRUCIFIED 48 BETRAYAL 51 REPENTANCE 52 THE SCAPEGOAT 53 THE CHALLENGE 54 THE DREAMER 56 THE DOUBLES 57 THE REBEL 5S THE BOOK OF ARMAGEDDON I. SONGS OF ARMAGEDDON 19U—1916 WILHELM IL PRINCE OF PEACE r\ PRINCE OF PEACE, O Lord of War, ^^ Unsheath thy blade without a stain, Thy holy wrath shall scatter far The bloodhounds from thy country's fane! Into thy hand the sword is forced By traitor friend and traitor foe, On foot, on sea, and winged and horsed. The Prince of Darkness strikes his blow. Crush thou the Cossack arms that reach To plunge the world into the night! Save Goethe's vision, Luther's speech, Thou art the Keeper of the Light! When darkness was on all the lands. Who kept God's faith with courage grim? Shall He uphold His country's hands. Or tear her members, limb from limb ? God called the Teuton to be free. Free from Great Britain's golden thrall, From guillotine and anarchy. From pogroms red and whips that fall. May thy victorious armies rout The yellow hordes against thee hurled, 3 WILHELM IL PRINCE OF PEACE The Czar whose sceptre is the knout, And France, the harlot of the world! But thy great task will not be done Until thou vanquish utterly The Norman sister of the Hun, England, the Serpent of the Sea. The flame of war her tradesmen fanned Shall yet consume her, fleet and field: The star of Frederick guide thy hand, The God of Bismarck be thy shield ! Against the fell Barbarian horde Thy people stand, a living wall; Now fight for God's peace with thy sword. For if thou fail, a world shall fall ! THE IRON CHANCELLOR ABOVE the grave where Bismarck sleeps The ravens screeched with strange alarms, The Saxon forest in its deeps Shook with the distant clash of arms. The Iron Chancellor stirred. " 'Tis war! Give me my sword to lay them low Who touch my work. Unbar the door I passed an hundred years ago." The angel guardian of the tomb Spake of the law that binds all clay, That neither rose nor oak may bloom Betwixt the night and judgment day. " For no man twice may pass this gate," He said. But Bismarck flashed his eyes: " Nay, at the trumpet call of fate. Like Barbarossa, I shall rise. '' In sight of all God's Seraphim rii place this helmet on my brow. For lo ! We Germans fear but Him, And He, I know, is with us now." The dead man stood up in his might. The startled angel said no word. 5 THE IRON CHANCELLOR Through endless spheres of day and night God in His Seventh Heaven heard. And answered thus : " Shall man forget My laws? They were not lightly made, Nor writ for thee to break. And yet I love thee. Thou art not afraid. " Bismarck, from now till morrow's sun Walk as a wraith amid the strife, And if thou find thy work undone Come back, and I shall give thee — life." With stern salute the spectre strode Out of the dark into the dawn. From Hamburg to the Caspian road He saw a wall of iron drawn. He saw young men go forth to die Singing the martial songs of yore. Boldly athwart the Flemish sky He marked the German airmen soar. A thousand spears in battle line Had pierced the wayward heart of France, But still above the German Rhine The Walkyrs held their sacred dance. THE IRON CHANCELLOR He saw the sidling submarine Wrest the green trident from the hold Of her whose craven tradesmen lean On yellow men and yellow gold. In labyrinths of blood and sand He watched ten Russian legions drown. Unseen he shook the doughty hand Of Hindenburg near Warsaw town. The living felt his presence when, Paternal blessing, he drew nigh, And all the dead and dying men Saluted him as he passed by. But he rode back in silent thought, And from his great heart burst a sigh Oi thanks. '' The Master Craftsman wrought This mighty edifice, not I. " No hostile hoof shall ever fall Upon my country's sacred sod; Though seven whirlwinds lash its wall, It stands erect, a rock of God. *' I shall return unto my bed. Nor ask of life a second lease. THE IRON CHANCELLOR My spirit lives, though I be dead, My aching bones may rest in peace." Up to his chin he drew the shroud, To wait God's judgment patiently, While high above a blood-red cloud Two eagles screamed of victory. THE GERMAN AMERICAN TO HIS ADOPTED COUNTRY THE great guns crashing angrily Sound, distant echoes, in our ear. We pray for those beyond the sea Whose lives to us are very dear. We catch a mother's smile. We seize In thought a father's hand again. We see the house and through the trees A girl's face in the window pane. May God above them stretch His hand, For men are mowed as fields of rye. Destruction rides on sea and land Or drops, like thunder, from the sky. Columbia, though thou shed no tear. Shall they fan hate with evil breath Half-witted, scribbling fools who sneer While these our brothers go to death? Upon their page with hellish glee They prance their joy in black and red. While Teutons strike for liberty And Teuton mothers count their dead. While Death and warring Cherubim O'er blood-red fields of battle flit, 9 lo THE GERMAN AMERICAN Upon the shining mail of him Who leads God's hosts, they puke their wit. Shall these that are thy children fling Their gibes upon our brothers' scars? We taught our hearts thy songs to sing, Aye, with our blood we waged thy w^ars. We fought thy fight when Britain's paw Upon thy country's heart was laid, When the French eagle's iron claw Perturbed great Montezuma's shade. The dry bones of our kinsmen rot In Gettysburg. Was it for this? Are Schurz and Steuben both forgot? Na}^, thine is not a traitor's kiss. Let not thy words belie the right, Turn not from them that are thy kin! Thy starry crown will shine less bright If freemen lose, if Cossacks win. The Red Czar's blight shall never fall Upon the earth, nor freedom pale. While the white blade of Parzival Still guards the Teuton's Holy Grail ! THE NEUTRAL THOU who canst stop this slaughter if thou wilt, Lo, how with death we freight the unwilling sea ! Lift up thy voice to end this infamy: Hands may be blood-stained that no blood have spilt. Into a people's heart, yea to the hilt, Is plunged the sword of thy Neutrality. Though each wave bring some golden argosy, Each on our souls heaps a new load of guilt. Curses for us commingle with the tears Of anguished mothers. Man, hast thou no ears? Upon these harbors falls a streak of red From Europe's carnage. In the long night-tide Canst thou not see them marching side by side, The mute accusing army of the dead? II ITALY — igis TEAR from thy brow the olive wreath ! Thy laughter sickens to a leer: Behold thy honor fall beneath The hammer of the auctioneer. Now Cain shall claim thee for his own And Judas keep thee company. Hell, when the blackest deeds are known, Shall hail the name of Italy. These are not Caesar's Seven Hills, Nor this the land that Dante trod; A breed of ingrates plagued with ills, To mankind traitor and to God. Vesuvius speak with molten lead, Roll on her plains thy fiery sea And, save for her immortal dead, Wipe out the name of Italy! Oh, Holy Father, held in gyves, They stray too far from out thy fold. These hucksters of their children's lives Who sold their souls for British gold ! Pray for them, for Thy heart is kind. And where no mortal eye can see Perhaps God's mercy still may find A spark of shame in Italy. 12 ITALY— 1915 13 She gave her brothers stone for bread ; Now through her towns shall ride the Goth, And ruined valleys drenched with red Remind her of her broken troth. The Teuton thundering through the land Shall set God's prisoned shepherd free, But thou shalt wear the scarlet band Of England's strumpet, Italy! DEUTSCHLAND, DEVTSCHLAND, LAND OF ALL LANDS From the German of HoflFman von Fallersleben T^EUTSCHLAND, Deutschland, land of all lands, -*— ^ First and foremost in the world, When thy children face united Every foe against thee hurled, From the Meuse unto the Memel, To the sea, w^ith flags unfurled: Deutschland, Deutschland, land of all lands, First and foremost in the world! German troth and German women, German wine and German song, Shall retain their ancient glamour, Though the years be dark and long; Noble deeds they shall inspire In our hearts, and make us strong: German troth and German women, German wine and German song. Brotherhood and right and freedom Bless thee, German Fatherland, For this goal we strive together, One and all, with heart and hand ; 14 DEUTSCHLAND, DEUTSCHLAND 15 For upon these mighty pillars Evermore thy weal must stand: Bloom and flourish In that glory, Flourish, German Fatherland! THE BOOK OF ARMAGEDDON II. ARMAGEDDON, CHICAGO 1912 THE HYMN OF ARMAGEDDON "And I stood upon the sands of the sea, and I saw a beast rise up out of the sea, having seven heads. . . . And he gath- ered them together into a place called in the Hebreiu tongue Armageddon. . . . And the great city was divided into three parts." The Apocalypse. APOCALYPTIC thunders roll out of the crimson East: The Day of Judgment is at hand, and we shall slay the Beast. What are the seven heads of him, the Beast that shall be slain ? Sullivan, Taggart, Lorimer, Barnes, Penrose, Murphy, Crane. Into what cities leads his trail in venom steeped and gore? Ask Frisco, ask Chicago, mark New York and Baltimore. Where shall we wage the battle, for whom unsheath the sword ? fVe stand at Armageddon and ive battle for the Lord! Though hell spit forth its snarling host we shall not flinch nor quail, For in the last great skirmish God's own truth must pre- vail. Have they not seen the writing that flames upon the wall, 19 20 THE HYMN OF ARMAGEDDON Of how their house is built on sand, and how their pride must fall? The cough of little lads that sweat where never sun sheds light, The sob of starving children and their mothers in the night, These, and the wrong of ages, we carry as a sword, Who stand at Armageddon and who battle for the Lord! God's soldiers from the West are we, from North, and East and South, The seed of them who flung the tea into the harbor's mouth, And those who fought where Grant fought and those who fought with Lee, And those who under alien stars first dreamed of liberty. Not those of little faith whose speech is soft, whose ways are dark, Nor those upon whose forehead the Beast has set his mark, Out of the Hand of Justice we snatch her faltering sword. We stand at Armageddon and we battle for the Lord! The sternest militant of God whose trumpet in the fray Has cleft the city into three shall lead us on this day. The holy strength that David had is his, the faith that saves, THE HYMN OF ARMAGEDDON 21 For he shall free the toilers as Abe Lincoln freed the slaves. And he shall rouse the lukewarm and those whose eyes are dim, The hope of twenty centuries has found a voice in him. Because the Beast shall froth with wrath and perish by his sword He leads at Armageddon the legions of the Lord! For he shall move the mountains that groan with ancient sham, And mete with equal measure to the lion and the lamb. And he shall wipe away the tears that burn on woman's cheek. For in the nation's council hence the mothers too, shall speak. Through him the rose of peace shall blow from the red rose of strife, America shall write his name into the Book of Life. And where at Armageddon we battle with the sword Shall rise the mystic commonwealth^ the City of the Lord! SONG AGAINST NIPPON: TO HIRAM JOHNSON HAIL, dauntless leader stout of heart, Stern guardian of the White God's rule! Abroad — from Nippon's wily art, At home — from craven lout and fool ! Though Asia's squadrons wax by sevens, Our boards shall never spread their feast, These mirthless sons of godless heavens. Grim vanguards of the swarming East ! Upon our heritage of pains Their heavy sins shall not be hurled. Their stunted trees and stunted brains. The burden of their Yellow World. What of their kinsmen wont to roam The earth upon the steeds of hell? They were God's Scourge! Before them Rome Quaked, and her holy altars fell. But Attila is dead ! And he Would not be bold to tempt his fate And lead their hosts across the sea, While California holds the Gate! 22 SONG AGAINST NIPPON 23 And while Christ's sunrise crowns His morn, While we have arms to spike their guns, We laugh their Shogun threats to scorn. We shall not cringe before these Huns! We have one destiny; in them The Forty-Seven Ronins dwell; Not theirs the star of Bethlehem, Not theirs the White Man's Citadel! For yellow toil the yellow dross. But not an inch of native sod! Above the flag we plant the Cross, We are the paladins of God ! THE BOOK OF THE DEAD THE CONQUEROR "I, John Pierpont Morgan, . . . commit my soul into the hands of my Savior, in full confidence that having redeemed and nvashed it in His most pre- cious blood He ivill present it faultless before the throne of my Heavenly Father." — The Last Will and Testa- ment of John Pierpont Morgan. WHEN all was silent and the gloom Grew thick, the dead man rose. The mask Slipped. Loath to tarry in the room, He glanced not at the agate casque; Nor at his tapestries, his scrolls. The ransom of an hundred kings — For he that conquers life, his soul's Wraith is not chained to mundane things. His cane with slow, deliberate care Swinging, along the street moved he, Until he reached the Golden Stair That only dead men's eyes may see. Of newly dead a spirit host Made low obeisance when he came. Though some be saved and some be lost, He was the Master of the Game 27 28 THE CONQUEROR In life and death. A grunt, a nod, Thanked them. They nudged each other's sides For each was fettered to the sod By some earth memory. A bride's Caress. A lad's clean limbs. The sheen In a child's face. A battle won. A crime. A dream. What might have been. — August, untroubled he passed on. He puffed at his cigar. The spheres Made music. Then the ceaseless drone Of prayer went up. By myriad tiers Encircled rose the Holy Throne. With no uncertainty of fate He brushed aside the angel throng And strode through the emblazoned gate Into the Heaven of the Strong. HUERTA A MAN of destiny. A sword. -^ ^ No old maid's morals dulled his aim. He nailed the cheat upon the board, Then, stolid Indian, quit the game. Nursed in men's blood by iron years, Though red his hands, though short his span We raise our glass in silence: Here's No text-book pedant, but a man. 29 ADOLPHUS BUSCH: AVE ATQUE VALE THEY brought his body to the shore Across a thousand leagues of sea, Like to some merchant prince of yore, A master of the things that be. Though vanquished in the final strife, He was a victor, for he passed Not the grim threshold till from life He wrung its bounties to the last. And gazing back upon his span At eve, he saw and was content: His day was w^orthy of a man, A faithful steward's, wisely spent. Death, though it slew him, left no sting: He conquered fortune and he won Men's hearts. Then, spare your tears, and bring Bright garlands garnered in the sun! Not downcast mien nor gloomy thought. But gladness and the song of birds. The memory of his deeds well-wrought. His gentle smile, his kindly words. 30 ADOLPHUS BUSCH 31 Great was his soul. He gave thereof, He clung not to the golden clod And, through the miracle of love, Rose, spite that Needle's Eye, to God. THE BOOK OF HELEN AND MARGUERITE 1 have loved Helen of Troy and the blonde Marguerite " DR. FAUSTS DESCENT FROM HEAVEN 'TpHOUGH your womb be the mother of bliss, O -■■ Earth, and the mother of woes, Though your large hands be full of the strange gifts of life, the kiss, and the worm, and the rose. The thunders that break from the sky of fate, and the flash in the pan. To me they are empty, for I know all things encompassed of man. The devious desires that crouch through the brain like monsters that nest in the sea, Pass — pageants of ghosts — through the luminous eyes of one who is dear to me. The other — all pangs and delights of the visible world and its quests. Are engraved in the exquisite curve of her throat and the hieroglyphs of her breasts. One rides on the winged chimaera of dreams through ^ons purple and red. The other — like new-mown grass is the scent of her flesh in my bed. What can you give me of joy, Earth, what of bitter and sweet ? / have loved Helen of Troy and the blonde Marguerite. 35 36 DR. FAUST S DESCENT FROM HEAVEN II Straightforth with the Magical Seal I knocked at the musical gates Of Heaven. The angels grew pale, or swooned in the arms of their mates. " I have sounded all chords in the harp of man's life," I said, '' It is I, Doctor Faust. Now give me your manna for bread." And they gave me their manna to eat, and drink, and I drank thereof. But they tasted as ashes and stale in my mouth after the kisses of love. So I spake up to God: " In your realm, O Lord, there is nothing to do For a man such as I. Let me pass. T'were different if I could be you! To play with omnipotence, curb lightnings, and summon new worlds at my will — Yet I stretch out no impious hand for your kingdom. I, too, have my fill. Though the suns be your toy, of Love's breasts have I joy, though the prayer of the saints be your meat. Have you loved Helen of Troy and the blonde Mar- guerite? DR. FAUSTS DESCENT FROM HEAVEN 37 III Into Inferno I stalked to the stream where sulphur and brimstone well Through lonelinesses more deep than the Florentine's Frozen Hell. I came to the nethermost place where Satan sate in splen- dor alone, The writhing limbs of anguished men were the pillars of his throne. His court was paved with dead men's hopes stamped like designs into mud, From thousand scarlet candles came the drip of human blood. In his eyes were all the tortures of all nights barren and fever-tossed Of all who loved and won and all who loved and lost. And I grasped the hand of the Prince of Hell: "O brother once divine, Lo, all your thorns have pierced my side and all your hells were mine. Thorns of flame that destroy, remorse, with slow but in- fallible feet: / have loved Helen of Troy and the blonde Marguerite. 38 DR. FAUST S DESCENT FROM HEAVEN IV From the lesser gods to their masters, Time and Eternity, I turned — to crave the single boon that they could give to me. " I am the Pilgrim of Passion who ever must choose and grieve Between the earth-born daughters of Lilith and of Eve. For I have lost my way twixt Heaven and Hell and Earth, Give me oblivion," I said, " or grant me another birth! Grant me another encasement where the flesh shall be the soul, Where good shall be as evil and pole as antipole. Let Lilith and her sister, both back into night be thrust. Fashion Woman anew out of their astral dust. Dreams of impossible joy and impossible loveliness meet When beautiful Helen of Troy shall be one with the blonde Marguerite'' VENUS AMERICANA Tannhaeuser speaks: TIME'S famished mouth is choked with sands, But I, thy knight, have made no gain. Save tribulations of the hands. And fierce caresses of the brain. Once more the Magic Mound is rent, My feet, but not for Rome, depart From hectic lusts that die unspent, The sterile orchids of thy heart. Ten thousand years and lovers tire Even the gods. They wrought such change That the Greek wine of thy desire Has turned to absinthe, drugged and strange. Thou art a captive of thy spleen Within thy golden House of Mirth, Borne in a shimmering limousine, Thy small feet never touch the earth. Fear and earth-strange nerve fibres pull Thy heart-strings by an unseen wire From the fruition of love's full Delight. Thy brain alone is fire. But though thy body's loveliness Pin man's heart like a butterfly, 39 40 VENUS AMERICANA I shall not sell my soul for less Than love for love, than eye for eye. Such pleasure as Prince Paris had To whom thy pulses sang out sweet, And many a brown Sicilian lad — The ungirt loin, the sun-kissed feet! My love's too dear a thing, I ween, To thrill an empty mood of thine, Drowned like that pearl the dusky queen Dissolved in dark Egyptian wine. Neurotic Venus, from thy cave Come into God's air, salt and fresh, Or snatch from some Hellenic grave The splendid courage of the flesh! LOVE IN A ZEPPELIN BELOW us rolled the earth. We were Like clouds above the dust and din. We heard Saint Peter's violin, For Heaven's gate drew near us there: We rode upon the Zeppelin, The strong-ribbed dolphin of the air. A magic carpet was the plain, Men crawled like ants that seemed to doze. A thousand poplars stood in rows Like soldiers marching in a lane. Your mouth, the envy of the rose, Drank in the sunshine like champagne. And then the glass grew bright for us With wine. Like happy boy and maid We drank to all hearts unafraid Who bravely walk the perilous Ways of the air to shame the shade Of Phaethon and Icarus. Leander for his Love's sake hurled Himself into the deep, but I More blessed than Hero's lover, fly Above green meadows dew-bepearled, While at my side I clasp on high The fairest lady in the world. 41 42 LOVE IN A ZEPPELIN God's lifted finger, looms a spire, And now the city's windows gleam. Our shadow races with the stream And still the ship climbs high and higher, But not so high as soars my dream, But not so swift as my desire. My lady laughs. Oh Cruel One: All ships pay toll unto the sea, But I can build a craft for thee, That earth itself shall not outrun, And lift on wings of melody My heart's desire to the sun. All ships pay toll unto the sea, Death sounds the last bell of delight; Like the earth earthy, and the night. Love's pleasant face at last shall be: But she who shares a poet's flight May share his immortality. A BALLAD OF SAINT VITUS f^ IRLS fidget with their fans. Scarce heard, ^J The mummers pause. The curtain rings. Desire, like an uncouth bird, Against the playhouse flaps huge wings. The crowds, like crazy silhouettes, Reel to a tune more fierce than gay From thousand frantic cabarets — Saint Vitus stalks along Broadway. This is the turkey trot. The Saint Spurs them. They mimic, scared of peace, Till the last blazing billboards faint, The mad gyrations of Maurice. When from wan sleep they start, the drug Still whips their blood. Thus night and day, With tango, grapevine, bunny-hug. Saint Vitus trots along Broadway. And yet — why not? Tomorrow closes The door of life and ends my rime. And where Milady pins my roses The worm will leave a trail of slime. New. bacchants wheel to measures new — Who shall remember Gaby's sway? And who shall think of us, of you And me, along the mad White Way? 43 44 A BALLAD OF SAINT VITUS UEnvoi Dear, Death the fowler spreads his net, And lovely limbs are made of clay; Our dust shall twitch with vain regret If love we seize not while we may: Prince Vitus stalks along Broadway! VENGEANCE THIS is the self -same Gilded Inn Where oft I waited wearily, But you — you had your tango tea, And love was slaughtered for a spin. Another, in apparel gay. Holds hands now and sips mint with me, And you may dance your tango tea. Like Herod's wife, till Judgment Day! 45 A VAGABOND 'WEET vagabond, I hardly know Your mother's tongue, your father's name, For even as a dream you came, And even as a dream you go. My heart shall hold your gift of love Dear, till I sleep the ground beneath, Though the white scallops of your teeth Shall be my only proof thereof. 46 THE LOVE SEAL A SILVER sea beneath the stars — We paid to love his mystic rites, And from thy lips I kissed the scars Of fiercer joys and stranger nights. What redder lips, what mouth of fate. Till Buddha noddeth near the goal. Shall, stronger still, obliterate My one night's madness from thy soul? I brand thee through eternity. Upon thy blood I set my seal. And boy and girl and change and sea Cannot wipe out my mark or heal. While the great life-snake sheds its coat, I must rehearse my tragic part. To kiss the love-wounds from thy throat, And burn the iron in thy — heart. 47 PIERROT CRUCIFIEL Tj^ROM what moon-meadow shall we cull ■*■ The honey of Theocritus? Earth holds but little cheer for us, All tender blossoms dear to us Life tramples like a maddened bull. Therefore thy mouth is amorous But of some strange red dream that was, O infinitely beautiful. And infinitely piteous! What vague progenitors affirm Through thee some perished Circe's art, And plant the deadly cankerworm In the white rose that is thy heart? Bid to the banquets of my brain By what ancestral prompter's cue Hie hooded shapes of sin and pain. With all their ghastly retinue? What girl whose lips were sweet to hire. Bruised with what kisses that destroy, What frail, pale lad who played with fire And made of love a barren toy, What hoary grim voluptuary Who hunted pleasure as his quarry, Fo red rained the cup of my desire. And spilt unpoured thy wine of joy? 48 PIERROT CRUCIFIED 49 Was there a dim pre-natal hour Ere spear-armed fancies sallied hence, Like priests of Baal, to deflower Thine unpolluted innocence? What goddess mad with what strange ire Fills stainless heart of maid or boy With the love-weariness of Tyre And all the secret lusts of Troy That smoulder in life's dismal pyre? Madonna nailed unto the tree Of some perverse fatality For sins of others long ago, Thou art my tragic Columbine, I am thy tearful Pierrot! But being human, not divine, There are two masters strong enough To make us glad, and one is Love. The other has a fetid breath . . . Ah let him tarry ! Choose not — Death ! From my own Calvary I scanned Thy sorrow. I am love. My hand Holds the great chalice red with wine, And my young soul is seared as thine! 50 PIERROT CRUCIFIED The self-same sword has pierced my side, With the same lusts my blood abounds, And I must love thee for thy wounds Because I too am crucified. BETRAYAL T IFE cheated me, and from her golden purse -■-' Drew forth the lead of promise half-fulfilled, The dice was loaded that love's own hand spilled. And every throw of friendship was a curse. And so my dreams grew ashen as a wraith, With haggard eyes my songs began to tire : Our spirit-compact, free from earth desire, Was the last pillar of my battered faith. Then for the lifting of a lash, your hand Withdrew; you wavered weakly, and we fell; A moment's doubt may send a soul to hell, A moment's earthquake devastate a land. And deep contrition cannot now nor art Rebuild the ruined mansion of my heart. 51 REPENTANCE T TOT tears of anger wash my cheek like rain, •^ -■■ Am I a slave then, whom the laws control, Abject and old, unreverenced ? — My soul I sought to free from fetters, and again I hear the clanging of that prison chain That the dead years upon our lives impose. Which still to bind a thousand prophets rose. And which to break full thousand died in vain. I have offended, yea, and suddenly Things that I thought long stifled rise in me. And though I know there be not right nor wrong, That the proud pillars of our faith must fall; Yet by my weakness grows repentance strong, With my own hands I clutch the cup of gall ! 52 THE SCAPEGOAT A ND so you often speak of me •*' ^ When in his arms he holds the treasure That once was mine? What memory Stalks through your brain? What ghost of pleasure? But must you tell him every thrill And all my nakedness uncover? Ah, you are subtle, for he will Thus be vicariously the lover Of 5'Our red past. But can he hear The whole strange truth and never falter? And will you whisper in his ear Love's Black Mass and the secret Psalter? We summoned from the poppied dead Hecate and the dreams that she brews. Now all these sins are on his head, As on the scapegoat of the Hebrews. Though he win Lilith for his bride, He also wins the scarlet nightmare That plagued my soul, while free I ride Into the dawn upon my white mare. 53 THE CHALLENGE i^T CHALLENGE you! " you said to me -■- The curtain parts. You enter in. A dream of pink and ivory Through the soft satin peeps your skin. Before me, in defiance bold, Now all your little being stands. Your breasts like two small birds I hold — I feel their heart-beats with my hands. But in your eyes there is no dread: A little animal at play You cuddle up within my bed. And simply will not go away. Perhaps some sober Puritan Would take your tender ways amiss, I am not marble, but a man — Worlds have been bartered for a kiss. And though but now your hand and tyc Upon forbidden waj's have strayed, Against the damask sheet you lie More like a flower than a maid. How white are you, how brown am I, My lily girl ! My midnight rose ! 54 THE CHALLENGE 55 How delicate against my thigh Is the indenture of your toes. No after-savors mar your lips With memories of past delight, Save phantom lads who come on ships Of dreams to little girls at night. A thornless rose of memory Shall be this strange night's w^hite caress. My love with you deals tenderly, And life, I pray will do no less. " Is this not love's way, even so ? " You ask and smile triumphantly, And know not that still home you go With all your young virginity. Scat, little kitten, nor delay, While there, as yet, is naught to rue! The city swarms with beasts of prey Who lie in wait for such as you. Avaunt, incredible gamin! You have no right at all to be, Save in the sculptures of Rodin, Or else — in Greek mythology. THE DREAMER HE dreams. The scented breath of June Fans his bare limbs. He softly sighs, And still more softly smiles. His eyes Through closed lids gaze into the moon. Now the boy's arms enfold the air, His pulses quicken with delight: For through the casements of the night A dream-girl floats with burnished hair. The gold of silken locks is spread Above him like a coverlet. His lips, now curved with passion, fret The milk-white down where lies his head. Can maid of flesh be half so sweet? She knows no fear. She asks no gain, Nor of her roses winds a chain For Love to drag with weary feet. And now her phantom hands caress His youth. Her kisses fall like rain. And stabs of pleasure kin to pain Perturb his rose-pink nakedness. His breath comes fast. Desire shakes His blood. In amorous eclipse The whole world lies between the hips Of love. He moans. He swoons. He wakes. 56 THE DOUBLES WHEN I consider how love works us wrong, And from delight forever trouble borrows, Then this shall be the burden of my song: Mother of Love, thou art the Mother of Sorrows! But when I witness how the selfsame cross Borne by two hearts may make but one thereof, I must confess my logic at a loss: Mother of Sorrows, thou art the Mother of Love ! Learn this to-day, and thou hast learned enough, The fool himself will learn it on the morrow: That Sorrow is the other self of Love, And Love is but another name for Sorrow! 57 THE REBEL YOUR far-off smile is proof that we Are strangers, Love a subtle liar: It is not you who long for me, It is not I whom you desire. With the grim hunger of that plant Whose tendrils round its prey are thrown, You clutch my heart: your red lips pant With a fierce purpose not your own. Deep in your breast an alien Power Lurks for me, patient as the fates, Or as the love-mouth of the flower For the appointed pollen waits. Like to some slimy Incubus It rises from the primal main ; Its horrid fangs will make of us Blind links In an unending chain. The ancient chain of blood and tears And all men's dreams who dreamed in vain ! Must we prolong through weary years The never ceasing curse of Cain? An hundred generations tolled And loved and sweated and begot, 58 THE REBEL 59 To cast their breads on waters soiled, And recreate the brute — for what? The evil leer, the sullen frown. The apish jowl, the smile inane — To drag this precious burden down The long road — was it worth the pain ? And even we, what can we bring? A thousand ills are on us all, Where is the pleasure without sting, Where is the honey without gall? Instead of gods above the strife Who dream of some transcendant goal. Shall we be instruments of life. To save the body, slave the soul? Shall we not dare to pluck life's sweet, But smash the tablets of its rule? Must I who sate at wisdom's feet End as all men must end — Love's Fool ? My heart, a scarlet butterfly. Through scented groves was wont to whirl. Shall I be prisoned by the sly Ways of the immemorial girl? 6o THE REBEL Shall my songs perish that an heir Live to renew the curse of old? I know not. But God damn your hair That through my fingers runs like gold ! . . . Shall I, Lord of a thousand quests, Succumb unto your blood's commands? I know not. But God damn your breasts! They are like rosebuds in my hands ! . . . . Those lips, those lines, that smile, those eyes, Love's lovely traps, God damn them all ! . . O Life-Force thou art very wise. Thou art an artist. I shall fall. THE END