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Additional Poems By CaselyHayford Essay Research Paper

Additional Poems By Casely-Hayford Essay, Research Paper


Dawn


Dawn for the rich, the artistic and the


wise,


Is beauty splashed on canvas of the skies,


The brushes being the clouds that float


the blue,


Dipped in the breeze for paint, and washed


by dew.


But dawn to those who bathe the night in


tears,


Squeeze sustenance from hard unyielding


years,


Is full of strange imaginings and fears.


The dawn renews the terror of the day


Where harassing uncertainties hold sway;


And pain held in surcease through brief


hours of rest


Roars up its head in its unceasing quest


To wear out body, brain and mind and soul


Till death is a resolve, and death a goal.


For those life holds no beauty, dawn no


light,


For day is hopeless, dawn is struck with


blight.


Rainy Season Love Song


Out of the tense awed darkness, my Frangepani comes:


Whilst the blades of Heaven flash round her, and the roll of


thunder drums,


My young heart leaps and dances, with exquisite joy and pain,


As, storms within and storms without, I meet my love in the


rain.


"The rain is in love with you darling; it’s kissing you


everywhere,


Rain pattering over your small brown feet, rain in your curly


hair;


Rain in the vale that your twin breasts make, as in delicate


mounds they rise;


I hope there is rain in your heart, Frangepani, as rain half fills


your eyes."


Into my hands she cometh, and the lightning of my desire


Flashes and leaps about her, more subtle than Heaven’s fire;


"The lightning’s in love with you darling; it is loving you so


much


That its warm electricity in you pulses wherever I may touch.


When I kiss your lips and your eyes, and your hands like twin


flowers apart,


I know there is lightning, Frangepani, deep in the depths of your


heart."


The thunder rumbles about us, and I feel its triumphant note


As your warm arms steal around me, and I kiss your dusky


throat;


"The thunder’s in love with you darling; it hides its power in


your breast,


And I feel it stealing o’er me as I lie in your arms at rest.


I sometimes wonder, beloved, when I drink from life’s proffered


bowl,


Whether there’s thunder hidden in the innermost parts of your


soul."


Out of my arms she stealeth, and I am left alone with the night,


Void of all sounds save peace, the first faint glimmer of light.


Into some quiet, hushed stillness my Frangepani goes.


Is there peace within the peace without? Only the darkness


knows.


From Caroling Dusk, ed. Count?e Cullen (1927)


My Lips


My lips were buds of innocence until you


came one day


And drew a fountain from my heart and


careless went your way,


My lips were hungry, eager flowers curved


in ecstatic bliss


To gather the soft sweetness of my next


lover’s kiss.


My lips were luscious ripeness of a crushed


and poisoned vine


When you bent your lips upon me and my soft


ones clung to thine


My lips are withering fading flowers, full


weary unto death


Dew without moisture is thy kiss; wind


without heat thy breath.


A fugitive tear wells

up from my eyes and


is secretly, silently shed.


Are lips that once were innocent, so


withered, so parched, so dead?


Realisation


I did not know that you had the power to


hurt me,


I think I must have bequeathed it to you


unknowingly


One starlit night when I read the secret in


your eyes.


Did you read mine? I know now that you did.


Use your power gently, beloved, for in your


hands it becomes a merciless whip.


I did not know that you had the power to


make me happy,


I think I must have bequeathed it to you


unconsciously


In the warm darkness when your lips met mine


and pressed their weight of love on them.


Did your soul leap to meet mine? I know now


that it did.


Use your power gently, beloved, lest in your


hands it grows too great for me.


The Cart-Horse


When blue becomes intense and dusks to grey,


Grey unto darkness shrouding the worn day,


I like to lie awake and gaze upon the


cloudless sky


And hear the song of the cart-wheels as the


old cart-horse goes by.


The squeaking boards,


The rusty chains,


The clank of steel and brass,


The intermittent hoof-beats as the old


cart-horse goes past.


When darkness turns to grey again and grey


to light,


When little wrens awake prepared for flight,


I like to lie awake with the warm sun


streaming in,


And try to understand the tune the good old


cart-wheels sing.


The squeaking boards,


The rusty chains,


The clank of steel and brass;


Oh, I love to hear the music of the cart-


horse going past!


The Chief of Kitchom


Down to the Government Wharf


The Chief of Kitchom came,


Direct descendant of the line


That reigns in Kitchom’s name.


His face was like a hawk,


His eyes were bright and keen,


His mouth, a twist of irony,


His smile, swift cut and clean.


His pride sat on his brow


Like broad philactery,


His royalty like bands of steel


Girt round his dignity.


His gown was gara blue,


His red fez bound with white;


Nested each charm and prayer encased


In leather from our sight.


He looked a tower of strength,


His muscles easy played,


Rippled beneath his jet black skin


With every step he essayed.


His fingers gleamed with rings,


His feet were sandal-shod,


Girdles and chains hung round his neck,


His strong hand held a sword.


Thus Kitchom’s naked blade


Gleamed in the setting sun,


And Kitchom’s drums with throbbing beats


Mingled their tones as one.


Thirty slim, dark brown girls


stepped to the water’s side,


‘Behold the great-chief’s wives,’ they said,


For each had been a bride.


A great crowd pressed about


Whilst from the boat’s shaped stern,


Soft music poured from balanges


As water from an urn.


Put out, away to the west,


We breast the open main;


The Chief of Kitchom has been from home


And now returns again.


The boat is a tiny speck,


We stand on the quay alone;


While the sun breaks its red aureole


O’er the Chief that is going home.


[gara = indigo dye]

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