Profiles from China eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 31 pages of information about Profiles from China.

Profiles from China eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 31 pages of information about Profiles from China.

The Hand

As you sit so, in the firelight, your hand is the color of
    new bronze. 
I cannot take my eyes from your hand;
In it, as in a microcosm, the vast and shadowy Orient
    is made visible. 
Who shall read me your hand?

You are a large man, yet it is small and narrow, like the
    hand of a woman and the paw of a chimpanzee. 
It is supple and boneless as the hands wrought in pigment
    by a fashionable portrait painter.  The tapering
    fingers bend backward. 
Between them burns a scented cigarette.  You poise it
    with infinite daintiness, like a woman under the
    eyes of her lover.  The long line of your curved
    nail is fastidiousness made flesh.

Very skilful is your hand. 
With a tiny brush it can feather lines of ineffable suggestion,
    glints of hidden beauty.  With a little
    tool it can carve strange dreams in ivory and
    milky jade.

And cruel is your hand. 
With the same cold daintiness and skill it can devise
    exquisite tortures, eternities of incredible pain,
    that Torquemada never glimpsed. 
And voluptuous is your hand, nice in its sense of touch. 
Delicately it can caress a quivering skin, softly it can
    glide over golden thighs....  Bilitis had not
    such long nails.

Who can read me your hand? 
In the firelight the smoke curls up fantastically from
    the cigarette between your fingers which are the
    color of new bronze. 
The room is full of strange shadows. 
I am afraid of your hand....

From
the
Interior

Cormorants

The boats of your masters are black;
They are filthy with the slimy filth of ages; like the
    canals on which they float they give forth an evil
    smell. 
On soiled perches you sit, swung out on either side over
    the scummy water—­you who should be savage
    and untamed, who should ride on the clean breath
    of the sea and beat your pinions in the strong
    storms of the sea. 
Yet you are not held. 
Tamely you sit and willingly, ten wretches to a boat,
    lurching and half asleep.

Around each throat is a ring of straw, a small ring, so
    that you may swallow only small things, such as
    your masters desire. 
Presently, when you reach the lake, you will dive. 
At the word of your masters the parted waters will
    close over you and in your ears will be the gurgling
    of yellow streams. 
Hungrily you will search in the darkened void, swiftly
    you will pounce on the silver shadow.... 
Then you will rise again, bearing in your beak the
    struggling prey,
And your lousy lords, whose rings are upon your
    throats, will take from you the catch, giving in its
    place a puny wriggler which can pass the gates of
    straw. 
Such is your servitude.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Profiles from China from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.