The Black Christ & Other Poems/Two Poets

Two Poets
1

THE love-mad lark you sing of swooned," they said,
"And speared his bosom on a thorn of last
Year's rose; cease playing Orpheus; no blast
You blow can raise Eurydice once dead.
Our ears are cloyed with songs our fathers heard
Of how your lady's face and form were fair;
Put by your fluting; swell a martial air,
And spur us on with some prophetic word."

So, wearying, he changed his tune, and won
The praise of little men (who needed none) . . .
But oh to see him smile as when dawn blew
A trumpet only he could hear, and dew
He could not brush away besieged his eyes
At sight of gulls departing from his skies.

2

HOW could a woman love him; love, or wed?"
And thinking only of his tuneless face
And arms that held no hint of skill or grace,
They shook a slow, commiserative head
To see him amble by; but still they fed
Their wilting hearts on his, were fired to race
Once more, and panting at life's deadly pace,
They drank as wine the blood-in-song he shed.

Yet in the dream-walled room where last he lay,
Soft garments gathered dust all night and day,
As women whom he loved and sang of came
To smooth his brow and wail a secret name.
A rose placed in his hand by Guinevere
Was drenched with Magdalen's eternal tear.