IN WAR

Fret the nonchalant noon

With your spleen

Or your gay brow,

For the motion of your spirit

Ever moves with these.

When day shall be too quiet,

Deaf to you

And your dumb smile,

Untuned air shall lap the stillness

In the old space for your voice—

The voice that once could mirror

Remote depths

Of moving being,

Stirred by responsive voices near,

Suddenly stilled for ever.

No ghost darkens the places

Dark to One;

But my eyes dream,

And my heart is heavy to think

How it was heavy once.

In the old days when death

Stalked the world

For the flower of men,

And the rose of beauty faded

And pined in the great gloom,

One day we dug a grave:

We were vexed

With the sun’s heat.

We scanned the hooded dead:

At noon we sat and talked.

How death had kissed their eyes

Three dread noons since,

How human art won

The dark soul to flicker

Till it was lost again:

And we whom chance kept whole—

But haggard,

Spent—were charged

To make a place for them who knew

No pain in any place.

The good priest came to pray;

Our ears half heard,

And half we thought

Of alien things, irrelevant;

And the heat and thirst were great.

The good priest read: “I heard....”

Dimly my brain

Held words and lost....

Sudden my blood ran cold....

God! God! It could not be.

He read my brother’s name;

I sank—

I clutched the priest.

They did not tell me it was he

Was killed three days ago.

What are the great sceptred dooms

To us, caught

In the wild wave?

We break ourselves on them,

My brother, our hearts and years.