The Lonely Dancer and Other Poems eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 56 pages of information about The Lonely Dancer and Other Poems.

The Lonely Dancer and Other Poems eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 56 pages of information about The Lonely Dancer and Other Poems.

V

A BALLAD OF WOMAN (Gratefully Dedicated to Mrs. Pankhurst)

She bore us in her dreaming womb,
  And laughed into the face of Death;
She laughed, in her strange agony,—­
  To give her little baby breath.

Then, by some holy mystery,
  She fed us from her sacred breast,
Soothed us with little birdlike words—­
To rest—­to rest—­to rest—­to rest;

Yea, softly fed us with her life—­
  Her bosom like the world in May: 
Can it be true that men, thus fed,
  Feed women—­as I hear them say?

Long ere we grew to girl and boy,
  She sewed the little things we wore,
And smiled unto herself for joy—­
  Mysterious Portress of the Door.

Shall she who bore the son of God,
  And made the rose of Sappho’s song,
She who saved France, and beat the drum
  Of freedom, brook this vulgar wrong?

I wonder if such men as these
  Had once a sister with blue eyes,
Kind as the soothing hand of God,
  And as the quiet heaven wise.

I wonder if they ever saw
  A soldier lying on a bed
On some lone battle-field, and watched
  Some holy woman bind his head.

I wonder if they ever walked,
  Lost in a black and weary land,
And suddenly a flower came
  And took them softly by the hand.

I wonder if they ever heard
  The silver scream, in some grey morn,
High in a lit and listening tower,
  Because a man-child then was born.

I wonder if they ever saw
  A woman’s hair, or in her eye
Read the eternal mystery—­
  Or ever saw a woman die.

I wonder, when all friends had gone,—­
  The gay companions, the brave men—­
If in some fragile girl they found
  Their only stay and comrade then.

She who thus went through flaming hell
  To make us, put into our clay
All that there is of heaven, shall she—­
  Mother and sister, wife and fay,—­

Have no part in the world she made—­
  Serf of the rainbow, vassal flower—­
Save knitting in the afternoon,
  And rocking cradles, hour by hour!

AN EASTER HYMN

Spake the Lord Christ—­“I will arise.” 
  It seemed a saying void and vain—­
  How shall a dead man rise again!—­
Vain as our tears, vain as our cries. 
  Not one of all the little band
  That loved Him this might understand.

“I will arise”—­Lord Jesus said. 
  Hearken, amid the morning dew,
  Mary, a voice that calleth you,—­
Then Mary turned her golden head,
  And lo! all shining at her side
  Her Master they had crucified.

At dawn to his dim sepulchre,
  Mary, remembering that far day,
  When at his feet the spikenard lay,
Came, bringing balm and spice and myrrh;
  To her the grave had made reply: 
  “He is not here—­He cannot die.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Lonely Dancer and Other Poems from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.