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Allen Tate - A PauperAllen Tate - A Pauper
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. . . and the children`s teeth shall be set on edge. I see him old, trapped in a burly house Cold in the angry spitting of a rain Come down these sixty years.                                   Why vehemently Astride the threshold do I wait, marking The ice softly pendent on his broken temple? Upon the silence I cast the mesh of rancor By which the gentler convergences of the flesh Scatter untokened, mercilessly estopped. Why so illegal these tears? The years` incertitude and The dirty white fates trickling Blackly down the necessary years Define no attitude to the present winter, No mood to the cold matter. (I remember my mother, my mother, A stiff wind halted outside, In the hard ear my country Was a far shore crying With invisible seas) When tomorrow pleads the mortal decision Sifting rankly out of time`s sieve today, No words differently will be uttered Nor stuttered, like sheep astray. A pauper in the swift denominating Of a bald cliff with a proper name, having words As strumpets only, I cannot beat off Invincible modes of the sea, hearing: Be a man my son by God.                                   He turned again To the purring jet yellowing the murder story, Deaf to the pathos circling in the air.
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