Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Allen Tate - Message From AbroadAllen Tate - Message From Abroad
Work rating: Low


To Andrew Lytle Paris, November 1929 Their faces are bony and sharp but very red, although their ancestors nearly two hundred years have dwelt by the miasmal banks of tidewaters where malarial fever makes men gaunt and dosing with quinine shakes them as with a palsy. Traveller to America (1799). I What years of the other times, what centuries Broken, divided up and claimed? A few Here and there to the taste, in vigilance Ceaseless, but now a little stale, to keep us Fearless, not worried as the hare scurrying Without memory . . .                                         Provence, The Renascence, the age of Pericles, each A broad, rich-carpeted stair to pride With manhood now the cost-they`re easy to follow For the ways taken are all notorious, Lettered, sculptured, and rhymed; Those others, incuriously complete, lost, Not by poetry and statues timed, Shattered by sunlight and the impartial sleet. What years . . . What centuries . . .                                       Now only The bent eaves and the windows cracked, The thin grass picked by the wind, Heaved by the mole; the hollow pine that Screams in the latest storm-these, These emblems of twilight have we seen at length, And the man red-faced and tall seen, leaning In the day of his strength Not as a pine, but the stiff form Against the west pillar, Hearing the ox-cart in the street- His shadow gliding, a long nigger Gliding at his feet. II Wanderers to the east, wanderers west: I followed the cold northern track, The sleet sprinkled the sea; The dim foam mounted The night, the ship mounted The depths of night- How absolute the sea! With dawn came the gull to the crest, Stared at the spray, fell asleep Over the picked bones, the white face Of the leaning man drowned deep; The red-faced man, ceased wandering, Never came to the boulevards Nor covertly spat in the sawdust Sunk in his collar Shuffling the cards; The man with the red face, the stiff back, I cannot see in the rainfall Down Saint-Michel by the quays, At the corner the wind speaking Destiny, the four ways. III I cannot see you The incorruptibles, Yours was a secret fate, The stiff-backed liars, the dupes: The universal blue Of heaven rots, Your anger is out of date- What did you say mornings? Evenings, what? The bent eaves On the cracked house, That ghost of a hound. . . . The man red-faced and tall Will cast no shadow From the province of the drowned.
Source

The script ran 0.001 seconds.