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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


THE CLASSIC TOUCH by JOHN COWPER POWYS

First Line: THEY ARE THE LITTLE THINGS
Last Line: AND THAT TOWN WAS NOTHING TO ME!
Subject(s): HEARTS; HELL; SOUL; STARS;

They are the little things
That strike our pulses dumb;
By-issues -- nothings -- light moth-wings,
Gone almost ere they come.

Caught in a crowded town,
My nerves laid quivering-bare,
To the floor of hell my soul sank down
And howled its protest there.

Bar-windows, Burlesque-signs,
Raw hideousness displayed,
And in unending lines
The people ebbed and swayed.

Foul refuse tinged the snow;
Its taste was in my mouth.
Discordant trolleys row on row
Went East, West, North and South.

Sudden some blessed chance --
O chance bringing gifts to all! --
Led me to cast a glance
On a patch of ancient wall.

And there an indecent sketch
Limned by some laughing boy --
O lovely and obscene wretch! --
Swept from me all annoy.

And the hideous iron place
With its monstrous crowds and cars
Was whirled into outer space
And diffused among the stars.

And alone by the fire with you
I sat and read Rabelais --
Rue des Beaux Arts, mon loup! --
And my soul was once more gay.

And the old great shades returned,
And the large sweet thoughts flowed free,
And my heart within me burned,
And that town was nothing to me!



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