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The Poetry of D. H. Lawrence - D. H. Lawrence


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it is also well between us.

       That you are with me in the end.

       That you never look quite back; nine-tenths, ah,

       more

       You look round over your shoulder;

       But never quite back.

       Nevertheless the curse against you is still in my

       heart

       Like a deep, deep burn.

       The curse against all mothers.

       All mothers who fortify themselves in motherhood,

       devastating the vision.

       They are accursed, and the curse is not taken off

       It burns within me like a deep, old burn,

       And oh, I wish it was better.

       BEUERBERG

      On the Balcony

       Table of Contents

      IN front of the sombre mountains, a faint, lost

       ribbon of rainbow;

       And between us and it, the thunder;

       And down below in the green wheat, the labourers

       Stand like dark stumps, still in the green wheat.

       You are near to me, and your naked feet in their

       sandals,

       And through the scent of the balcony's naked

       timber

       I distinguish the scent of your hair: so now the

       limber

       Lightning falls from heaven.

       Adown the pale-green glacier river floats

       A dark boat through the gloom—and whither?

       The thunder roars. But still we have each other!

       The naked lightnings in the heavens dither

       And disappear—what have we but each other?

       The boat has gone.

       ICKING

      Frohnleichnam

       Table of Contents

      You have come your way, I have come my way;

       You have stepped across your people, carelessly,

       hurting them all;

       I have stepped across my people, and hurt them

       in spite of my care.

       But steadily, surely, and notwithstanding

       We have come our ways and met at last

       Here in this upper room.

       Here the balcony

       Overhangs the street where the bullock-wagons

       slowly

       Go by with their loads of green and silver birch-

       trees

       For the feast of Corpus Christi.

       Here from the balcony

       We look over the growing wheat, where the jade-

       green river

       Goes between the pine-woods,

       Over and beyond to where the many mountains

       Stand in their blueness, flashing with snow and the

       morning.

       I have done; a quiver of exultation goes through

       me, like the first

       Breeze of the morning through a narrow white

       birch.

       You glow at last like the mountain tops when they

       catch

       Day and make magic in heaven.

       At last I can throw away world without end, and

       meet you

       Unsheathed and naked and narrow and white;

       At last you can throw immortality off, and I see you

       Glistening with all the moment and all your

       beauty.

       Shameless and callous I love you;

       Out of indifference I love you;

       Out of mockery we dance together,

       Out of the sunshine into the shadow,

       Passing across the shadow into the sunlight,

       Out of sunlight to shadow.

       As we dance

       Your eyes take all of me in as a communication;

       As we dance

       I see you, ah, in full!

       Only to dance together in triumph of being together

       Two white ones, sharp, vindicated,

       Shining and touching,

       Is heaven of our own, sheer with repudiation.

      In the Dark

       Table of Contents

      A BLOTCH of pallor stirs beneath the high

       Square picture-dusk, the window of dark sky.

       A sound subdued in the darkness: tears!

       As if a bird in difficulty up the valley steers.

       "Why have you gone to the window? Why don't

       you sleep?

       How you have wakened me! But why, why do

       you weep?"

       "I am afraid of you, I am afraid, afraid! There is something in you destroys me—!" "You have dreamed and are not awake, come here to me." "No, I have wakened. It is you, you are cruel to me!" "My dear!"—"Yes, yes, you are cruel to me. You cast A shadow over my breasts that will kill me at last." "Come!"—"No, I'm a thing of life. I give You armfuls of sunshine, and you won't let me live." "Nay, I'm too sleepy!"—"Ah, you are horrible; You stand before me like ghosts, like a darkness upright." "I!"—"How can you treat me so, and love me? My feet have no hold, you take the sky from above me." "My dear, the night is soft and eternal, no doubt You love it!"—"It is dark, it kills me, I am put out." "My dear, when you cross the street in the sun- shine, surely Your own small night goes with you. Why treat it so poorly?" "No, no, I dance in the sun, I'm a thing of life—" "Even then it is dark behind you. Turn round, my wife." "No, how cruel you are, you people the sunshine With shadows!"—"With yours I people the sunshine, yours and mine—" "In the darkness we all are gone, we are gone with the trees And the restless river;—we are lost and gone with all these." "But I am myself, I have nothing to do with these." "Come back to bed, let us sleep on our mysteries. "Come to me here, and lay your body by mine, And I will be all the shadow, you the shine. "Come, you are cold, the night has frightened you. Hark at the river! It pants as it hurries through "The pine-woods. How I love them so, in their mystery of not-to-be." "—But let me be myself, not a river or a tree." "Kiss me! How cold you are!—Your little breasts Are bubbles of ice. Kiss me!—You know how it rests "One to be quenched, to be given up, to be gone in the dark; To be blown out, to let night dowse the spark.


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