Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE GAZELLES, by THOMAS STURGE MOORE Poet's Biography First Line: When the sheen on tall summer grass is pale Last Line: Ineffectual herds of vanished delights. Alternate Author Name(s): Moore, T. Sturge Subject(s): Gazelles | ||||||||
WHEN the sheen on tall summer grass is pale, Across blue skies white clouds float on In shoals, or disperse and singly sail, Till, the sun being set, they all are gone: Yet, as long as they may shine bright in the sun, They flock or stray through the daylight bland, While their stealthy shadows like foxes run Beneath where the grass is dry and tanned: And the waste, in hills that swell and fall, Goes heaving into yet dreamier haze; And a wonder of silence is over all Where the eye feeds long like a lover's gaze: Then, cleaving the grass, gazelles appear (The gentler dolphins of kindlier waves) With sensitive heads alert of ear; Frail crowds that a delicate hearing saves, That rely on the nostrils' keenest power, And are governed from trance-like distances By hopes and fears, and, hour by hour, Sagacious of safety, snuff the breeze. They keep together, the timid hearts; And each one's fear with a panic thrill Is passed to an hundred; and if one starts In three seconds all are over the hill. A Nimrod might watch, in his hall's wan space, After the feast, on the moonlit floor, The timorous mice that troop and race, As tranced o'er those herds the sun doth pour; Like a wearied tyrant sated with food Who envies each tiniest thief that steals A crumb from his abstracted mood, For the zest and daring it reveals. He alone, save the quite dispassionate moon, Sees them; she stares at the prowling pard Who surprises their sleep and, ah! how soon Is riding the weakest or sleepiest hard! Let an agony's nightmare course begin, Four feet with five spurs a-piece control, Like a horse thief reduced to save his skin Or a devil that rides a human soul! The race is as long as recorded time, Yet brief as the flash of assassin's knife; For 'tis crammed as history is with crime 'Twixt the throbs at taking and losing life; Then the warm wet clutch on the nape of the neck, Through which the keen incisors drive; Then the fleet knees give, down drops the wreck Of yesterday's pet that was so alive. Yet the moon is naught concerned, ah no! She shines as on a drifting plank Far in some northern sea-stream's flow From which two numbed hands loosened and sank. Such thinning their number must suffer; and worse When hither at times the Shah's children roam, Their infant listlessness to immerse In energy's ancient upland home: For here the shepherd in years of old Was taught by the stars, and bred a race That welling forth from these highlands rolled In tides of conquest o'er earth's face: On piebald ponies or else milk-white, Here, with green bridles in silver bound, A crescent moon on the violet night Of their saddle cloths, or a sun rayed round, With tiny bells on their harness ringing, And voices that laugh and are shrill by starts, Prancing, curvetting, and with them bringing Swift cheetahs cooped up in light-wheeled carts, They come, and their dainty pavilions pitch In some valley, beside a sinuous pool, Where a grove of cedars towers in which Herons have built, where the shade is cool; Where they tether their ponies to low-hung boughs, Where long through the night their red fires gleam, Where the morning stir doth them arouse To their bath in the lake, as from dreams to a dream. And thence in an hour their hunt rides forth, And the cheetahs course the shy gazelle To the east or west or south or north; And every eve in a distant vale A hecatomb of the slaughtered beasts Is piled; tongues loll from breathless throats; Round large jet eyes the horsefly feasts.. Jet eyes, which now a blue film coats: Dead there they bleed, and each prince there Is met by his sister, wife, or bride.. Delicious ladies with long dark hair, And soft dark eyes, and brows arched wide, In quilted jacket, embroidered sash, And tent-like skirts of pleated lawn; While their silk-lined jewelled slippers flash Round bare feet bedded like pools at dawn: So choicefully prepared to please, Young, female, royal of race and mood, In indolent compassion these O'er those dead beauteous creatures brood: They lean some minutes against their friend, A lad not slow to praise himself, Who tells how this one met his end Out-raced, or trapped by leopard stealth, And boasts his cheetahs fleetest are; Through his advice the chance occurred, That leeward vale by which the car Was well brought round to head the herd. Seeing him bronzed by sun and wind, She feels his power and owns him lord, Then, that his courage may please her mind, With a soft coy hand half draws his sword, Just shudders to see the cold steel gleam, And drops it back in the long curved sheath; She will merge his evening meal in a dream And embalm his slumber like the wreath Of heavy-lidded flowers bewitched To murmur words of ecstasy For king who, though with all else enriched, Pays warlock for that the young hear free. But, while they sleep, the orphaned herd And wounded stragglers, through the night Wander in pain, and wail unheard To the moon and the stars so cruelly bright. Why are they born? ah! why beget They in the long November gloom Heirs of their beauty, their fleetness.. yet Heirs of their panics, their pangs, their doom? That to princely spouses children are born To be daintily bred and taught to please, Has a fitness like the return of morn: But why perpetuate lives like these? Why, with horns that jar and with fiery eyes, Should the male stags fight for the shuddering does Through the drear dark nights, with frequent cries From tyrant lust or outlawed woes? Doth the meaningless beauty of their lives Rave in the spring, when they course afar Like the shadows of birds, and the young fawn strives Till its parents no longer the fleetest are? Like the shadows of flames which the sun's rays throw On a kiln's blank wall, where glaziers dwell, Pale shadows as those from glasses they blow, Yet that lap at the blank wall and rebel.. Even so to my curious trance-like thought Those herds move over those pallid hills, With fever as of a frail life caught In circumstance o'er-charged with ills; More like the shadow of lives than life, Or most like the life that is never born From baffled purpose and foredoomed strife, That in each man's heart must be hidden from scorn, Yet with something of beauty very rare Unseizable, fugitive, half discerned; The trace of intentions that might have been fair In action, left on a face that yearned But long has ceased to yearn, alas! So faint a trace do they leave on the slopes Of hills as sleek as their coats with grass! So faint may the trace be of noblest hopes. Yet why are they born to roam and die? Can their beauty answer thy query, O soul? Nay, nor that of hopes which were born to fly, But whose pinions the common and coarse day stole. Like that region of grassy hills outspread, A realm of our thought knows days and nights And summers and winters, and has fed Ineffectual herds of vanished delights. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...GAZELLE CALF by DAVID HERBERT LAWRENCE GAZELLE; GAZELLA DORCAS by RAINER MARIA RILKE BEAUTIFUL MEALS by THOMAS STURGE MOORE SILENCE SINGS by THOMAS STURGE MOORE THE DYING SWAN by THOMAS STURGE MOORE THESEUS by THOMAS STURGE MOORE A MIDNIGHT ECSTASY by THOMAS STURGE MOORE |
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