Classic and Contemporary Poetry
AMARANTH, by HILDA DOOLITTLE Poet's Biography First Line: Am I blind alas Last Line: Save in her presence. Alternate Author Name(s): H. D.; Aldington, Richard, Mrs. Subject(s): Bible | ||||||||
I Am I blind alas, am I blind, I too have followed her path. I too have bent at her feet. I too have wakened to pluck amaranth in the straight shaft, amaranth purple in the cup, scorched at the edge to white. Am I blind? am I the less ready for her sacrifice? am I less eager to give what she asks, she the shameless and radiant? Am I quite lost, I towering above you and her glance, walking with swifter pace, with clearer sight, with intensity beside which you two are as spent ash? Nay I give back to my goddess the gift she tendered me in a moment of great bounty. I return it. I lay it again on the white slab of her house, the beauty she cast out one moment, careless. Nor do I cry out: "why did I stoop? why did I turn aside one moment from the rocks marking the sea-path? Andromeda, shameless and radiant, have pity, turn, answer us." Ah no - though I stumble toward her altar-step, though my flesh is scorched and rent, shattered, cut apart, and slashed open; though my heels press my own wet life black, dark to purple, on the smooth rose-streaked threshold of her pavement. II Am I blind, alas, deaf too, that my ears lost all this? Nay, O my lover, Atthis: shameless and still radiant I tell you this: I was not asleep. I did not lie asleep on those hot rocks while you waited. I was not unaware when I glanced out toward sea, watching the purple ships. I was not blind when I turned. I was not indifferent when I strayed aside or loitered as we three went, or seemed to turn a moment from the path for the same amaranth. I was not dull and dead when I fell back on our couch at night. I was not indifferent though I turned and lay quiet. I was not dead in my sleep. III Lady of all beauty, I give you this: say I have offered but small sacrifice, say that I am unworthy your touch, but say not, I turned to some cold, calm god, that I fell back at your first glance. Lady of all beauty, I give you this: say not, I have deserted your altar-steps, that the fire on your white hearth was too great, that I fell back your first glance. Lady, radiant and shameless, I have brought small wreaths, they were a child's gift. I have offered you white myrrh-leaf and sweet lentisk. I have laid rose-petals and white rock-rose from the beach. But I give now a greater, I give life and spirit with this, I render a grace no one has dared to speak at your carved altar-step, lest men point him out, slave, callous to your art, I dare more than the singer offering her lute, the girl her stained veils, the woman her swarthes of birth, the older woman her pencils of chalk and mirror and unguent box. I offer more than the lad, singing at your steps, praising himself mirrored in his friend's face, more than any girl, I offer you this, (grant only strength that I withdraw not my gift) I give you my praise for this: the love of my lover for his mistress. IV Let him go forth radiant, let life rise in his young breast, life is radiant, life is made for beautiful love and strange ecstasy, strait, searing body and limbs, tearing limbs and body from life; life is his if he take it, then let him take beauty as his right. Take beauty, wander apart in the tree-shadows, wander under wind-bowed sheaths of golden fir-boughs, go far, far from here in your happiness, take beauty for that is her wish: Her wish, the radiant and the shameless. V But I, how I hate you for this, how I despise and hate, was my beauty so slight a gift, so soon, so soon forgot? I hate you for this, and now that your fault be less, I would cry, turn back, lest she the shameless and radiant slay you for neglect. Neglect of the finest beauty upon earth my limbs, my body and feet, beauty that men gasp wondering that life could rest in so burnt a face, so scarred with her touch, so fire-eaten, so intense. Turn, for I love you yet, though you are not worthy of my love, though you are not equal to it. Turn back; true I have glanced out toward the purple ships with seeming indifference. I have fallen from the high grace of the goddess, for long days I have been dulled with this grief, but turn before the death strike, for the goddess speaks: She too is of the deathless, she too will wander in my palaces where all beauty is peace. She too is of my host that gather in groups or singly wait by some altar apart; she too is my poet. Turn if you will from her path, turn if you must from her feet, turn away, silent, find rest if you wish: find quiet where the fir-trees press, as you swaying lightly above the earth. Turn if you will from her path for one moment seek a lesser beauty and a lesser grace, but you will find no peace in the end save in her presence. | Other Poems of Interest...THE COMING OF THE PLAGUE by WELDON KEES O TO BE A DRAGON by MARIANNE MOORE BIBLICAL MEDITATIONS by YEHUDA AMICHAI KING DAVID DANCES by JOHN BERRYMAN THE DREAM SONGS: 234. THE CARPENTER'S SON by JOHN BERRYMAN THE DREAM SONGS: 47. APRIL FOOL'S DAY, OR, ST MARY OF EGYPT by JOHN BERRYMAN |
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