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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 18. ...his hot and eager hand...
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Eight John Reed Poems
Our Lady of Pain
Brown waffles and mellow molasses
Welsh rarebit that bites us and burns
Budweiser that fills up our glasses
The waiter that turns and returns
When these have gone by with their glories
What then to our stomachs remain?
Thou! Mystic and savage Dolores
Our Lady of Pain!
We physic and doctor and dope us
Thou art smoking and tempting and hot
What matter if pains telescope us
We eat thee, dyspepsia or not
Nor health nor hygiene Is the question
So fill up the bumpers again
Thou wilt come when we have Indigestion
Our Lady of Pain!
—John Reed[i]
1908
A Winter Run
Out of the warmth and the light,
Into the frosty weather,
Into the teeth of a winter’s night ,
Running, we sprang together.
The icy, silent dark leapt up
And struck me in the face –
And the moon hung out her silver cup
As trophy for the race.
Our driving breath flung out behind
Like some dim, flying plume;
Our shadows, on the snow outlined,
Ran with us in the gloom.
The long white road, the rhythmic beat,
The wind – sword in our hair –
On, here’s the spell of winged feet,
The charm of winter air!
A flashing glimpse, a scarce-seen face,
A figure clear, then gone,
Once more the dark, the swinging pace,
And on again, and on.
Across the river dim and still
The heedless sleepers lie,
And, finger-like, the towered hill
Stands up against the sky.
Into the warmth and the light.
Out of the frosty weather,
Out of the chill of a winter‘s night,
Glowing, we Sprang together.
—John Reed[ii]
1909
Dear Heart
Dear Heart, pale stars through the quiet night
Swing with a languorous music across the deep
And bring a wonderful peace to the hearts of men.
And you, so wan, from your fearful fight,
Throb still with the pain of your thinking. The angel Sleep
Wings softly, bearing you back to the skies again.
I see you smile in the silver light,
Sleeping, a child again, whispering tremulous words
To nameless souls in the child – world beyond our ken.
—John Reed[iii]
1909
And Yet—
Here do we part, you and the rest to stay
In the red valley where the lotus weaves
Glad pain with sleep; and up the rugged way.
I go alone, and wish I might forget.
And yet – and yet –
The sun is on the upland sheaves,
And all the grass with starry tears is wet.
Work! Work! Something to dull the ache
Of petty friends and little souls – ah, vain,
All vain the grief that you and you awake.
Gone is the old unutterable thrill,
And still – and still –
I hear from our the driving wraiths of rain
The brown thrush singing on the upland hill.
—John Reed[iv]
1909
Wanderlust
By the trackless shore of the sea, where the alien
shouting of breakers
Beats on a desolate land, and is lost in the swirl
or the dunes –
The unsatisfied souls of the sea-dead wander the
flowerless acres,
Tracing In shadowless sand their mystic Ineffable
runes,
For the sea calls to go forth to the sea and the
world’s far ending,
And the gull’s cry carries the sound of gongs from
the temples of Ind,
And the phantoms of wanderers suffer from lust and
desire unending,
Luring with scent of strange flowers caught In the
hair of the wind,
O call of our Mother and Bride, fierce Earth that
entices with danger,
Whose kiss is a Pain and a Torture, whose passion
is ultimate Death!
I follow thee Eastward alone, with a love that is
wilder and stranger
Than that of the dead who have mingled their breath
with the flame of thy breath.
The wrath of the sea is thy robe, and thy breasts are
the measureless mountains,
And the fire of thy spirit burns hot in the sullen
red heart of the East;
Thy whisper is fraught with the laughter of birds and
the murmur of fountains,
And the vagabond sons of men throng glad to the joy
of thy feast.
—John Reed[v]
1910
The Wanderer to His Heart’s Desire
There you – here I;
Not all the sweetness of your face,
Nor joy of your fair company,
Can bring us to one place.
I think of you –
A picture framed in sombre trees,
Eyes where a gleam of sky breaks through,
Gray days on Summer seas.
The Western Wind,
That runs the prairie like a flame,
Bears in his fragrant garments twined
A whisper of your name.
In some far land,
When I desire your comradeship
And the cool frankness of your hand,
The sweetness of your lip.
Then do you send
A blown kiss in the wind’s long hair;
And though I sleep at the world’s end
Yet will it find me there.
—John Reed[vi]
1911
A Song for May
It seems I have not breathed till now,
Nor felt such deep and still delight;
The wind’s a cool hand on my brow,
And I am robed in night –
In high and lordly night.
I want not gold nor silken grace,
Nor to be straw to men’s desire;
I’d clasp again my mother’s face
Before the evening fire –
The warm, transfiguring fire.
I want not love – alas, I hear
A spurred horse racing on the sand –
Ah, woe is me! I fear, I fear,
My lover’s burning hand –
His hot and eager hand!
—John Reed[vii]
1913
Love at Sea
Wind smothers the snarling of the great ships,
And the serene gulls are stronger than turbines;
Mile upon mile the hiss of a stumbling wave breaks unbroken –
Yet stronger is the power of your lips for my lips.
This cool green liquid death shall toss us living
Higher than high heaven and deeper than sighs –
But O the abrupt, stiff, sloping, resistless foam
Shall not forbid our taking and our giving!
Life wrenched from its roots – what wretchedness!
What waving of lost tentacles like blind sea-things!
Even the still ooze beneath is quick and profound –
I am less and more than I was, you are more and less.
I cried upon God last night, and God was not where I cried;
He was slipping and balancing on the thoughtless shifting planes of sea.
Careless and cruel, he will unchain the appalling sea-gray engines –
But the speech of your body to my body will not be denied!
—John Reed[viii]
1916
[i] “Our Lady of Pain” John Reed; originally unpublished
[ii] “A Winter Run” John Reed, originally published in January 1909 Harvard Illustrated Magazine
[iii] “Dear Heart” John Reed, originally published in March 1909 Harvard Monthly Magazine
[iv] “And Yet—” John Reed, originally published in March 1909 Harvard Monthly Magazine
[v] “Wanderlust” John Reed, originally published in May 1910 Harvard Monthly Magazine
The “Ind” appearing in this poem is probably a stand-in for “India”
[vi] “A Wanderer to His Heart’s Desire” John Reed, originally published in August 1911 American Magazine
[vii] “A Song for May” John Reed, originally published in May 1913 American Magazine
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