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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Poetry - 75. ...since you went away...
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Since you went away –
Two poems from Clifford Henry Benn Kitchin’s Winged Victory
From a Letter [in the Trenches]
“All day I walk with kind companions
(Who are for ever with me, like the poor),
Turning a darkened mind to this or that
Vague interest; talk from the afternoon
And on and on to lighting of the lamps,
Till casually someone mentions you,
And I am pale and silent.
Friendly eyes
Question my mood: “Since when are you so tired?”
And I reply as ever carelessly,
Meeting the gaze of kind companions
With resignation.
Smiles are ashen flowers
And life a desert, since you went away.” [i]
Vita Nova
I.
Your lips confess not, but your eyes declare
That I have dreamed too long, and in despair
I know not if my frozen apathy
Be life’s supreme achievement, or if I
Should rather make much effort to prevent
Time’s tricking sand from closing argument
With me, and scarcely formulate desire.
Was it well done to burn with such a fire,
Or earthly, of the earth-worm, to aspire?
II.
Drawn by the thought which dances in your brain
And beckons me, relentless suzerain,
To join the measure stepping as I may,
My unskilled feet, grotesque with interplay
Between the old desire of harmony
(Which the false movement mars regretfully),
And the new need of swift obedience,
Trace out an ill-stroked figure, having sense
Neither of knowledge nor of innocence.
III.
It may be that the sun has learned to smile
At night’s insatiate and transparent guile
Of eager onslaught, knowing in his heart
That night and day perforce have equal part
Of sky’s dominion, while the victory
Resigned to-day, to-morrow’s gain shall be;
So might you, knowing the magic of your power
Mark the amusement of the passing hour
And smile on me whose peace it shall devour.
IV.
With cowardice, “Too long,” and fear, “Too late,”
Upon your sovereignty I meditate,
But recognize at length that it is wain
To struggle any whit or to refrain;
For I am guided like a chrysalis
To inward stirring from the outward kiss
Of golden sun that penetrates all shells—
So grows the mystery in hidden cells
While wingèd life against the husk rebels. [ii]
[i] “From a Letter [of the Trenches] Clifford Henry Benn Kitchin Winged Victory (Oxford, circa 1920) p. 25
https://archive.org/details/wingedvictory00kitciala/page/24/mode/2up
[ii] “Vita Nova” Clifford Henry Benn Kitchin Ibid., ps. 37-38
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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