|
The Blind Bellow O the blind bellow in the pit of sleep! galloping strength lifts a huge neck of night To utter some lost luminosity But breaks into a blank of raptureless roar. Eyes that are suns covered with lids that are rock Yearn for a lightning-stroke from thunderous heavens Where power is one self-lustered harmony. No answer flashes down to the vague cry. The burning heart is beating ecstasy's rhythm Yet the broad tongue is a grey bitterness; The ears are deaf to the bright truth within. The wild breath seeks rose-pastured paradise— All that it wins are grasses without sap, Rare tufts fringing relentless crooked stones. Far is each thought; fool feet run round and round. . . Eternal seems the doom burying in the brute A god's soul, but the bellow never ends. Fallen lover of the glimmering herds on the hill, Beast of immortal beauty that is blocked From bursting back into beatitude By a dense body built of gross desire, Shall he not struggle with the enfolding deep That ever would oblivion the gold grace Lingering a thin white memory in his gloom? O some great noon will blaze to draw him high. He shall be plucked up if he keeps his dream Aloft—pale arms of prayer from the abyss, Horns of a crescent on a black bull's head! 22-6-48 Page-83 |