MERCHANTS FROM CATHAY

Their heels slapped their bumping mules; their fat chaps glowed.|How that
They came.
|

Glory unto Mary, each seemed to wear a crown!

Like sunset their robes were on the wide, white road:

So we saw those mad merchants come dusting into town!

Two paunchy beasts they rode on and two they drove before. |Of their
Beasts
,|

May the Saints all help us, the tiger-stripes they had!

And the panniers upon them swelled full of stuffs and ore!

The square buzzed and jostled at a sight so mad.

They bawled in their beards, and their turbans they wried. |And their
Boast
,|

They stopped by the stalls with curvetting and clatter.

As bronze as the bracken their necks and faces dyed—

And a stave they sat singing, to tell us of the matter.

“For your silks, to Sugarmago! For your dyes, to Isfahan! |With its
Burthen
|

Weird fruits from the Isle o’ Lamaree.

But for magic merchandise,

For treasure-trove and spice,

Here’s a catch and a carol to the great, grand Chan,

The King of all the Kings across the sea!

“Here’s a catch and a carol to the great, grand Chan; |And
Chorus.
|

For we won through the deserts to his sunset barbican;

And the mountains of his palace no Titan’s reach may span

Where he wields his seignorie!

“Red-as-blood skins of Panthers, so bright against the sun |A first
Stave
Fearsome
,|

On the walls of the halls where his pillared state is set

They daze with a blaze no man may look upon.

And with conduits of beverage those floors run wet.

“His wives stiff with riches, they sit before him there. |And a second
Right hard
To stomach
|

Bird and beast at his feast make song and clapping cheer.

And jugglers and enchanters, all walking on the air,

Make fall eclipse and thunder—make moons and suns appear!

“Once the Chan, by his enemies soreprest, and sorely spent, |And a third,
Which is a
Laughable
Thing.
|

Lay, so they say, in a thicket ’neath a tree

Where the howl of an owl vexed his foes from their intent:

Then that fowl for a holy bird of reverence made he!

“A catch and a carol to the great, grand Chan! |We gape to
Hear them end
,|

Pastmasters of disasters, our desert caravan

Won through all peril to his sunset barbican,

Where he wields his seignorie!

And crowns he gave us! We end where we began:

A catch and a carol to the great, grand Chan,

The King of all the Kings across the sea!

Those mad, antic Merchants!... Their stripèd beasts did beat |And are in
Terror
,|

The market-square suddenly with hooves of beaten gold!

The ground yawned gaping and flamed beneath our feet!

They plunged to Pits Abysmal with their wealth untold!

And some say the Chan himself in anger dealt the stroke— |And dread it is
Devil’s Work!
|

For sharing of his secrets with silly, common folk:

But Holy, Blessed Mary, preserve us as you may

Lest once more those mad Merchants come chanting from Cathay!

NIGHT[[54]]

Let the night keep

What the night takes,

Sighs buried deep,

Ancient heart-aches,

Groans of the lover,

Tears of the lost;

Let day discover not

All the night cost!

Let the night keep

Love’s burning bliss,

Drowned in deep sleep

Whisper and kiss,

Thoughts like white flowers

In hedges of May;

Let such deep hours not

Fade with the day!

Monarch is night

Of all eldest things,

Pain and affright,

Rapturous wings;

Night the crown, night the sword

Lifted to smite.

Kneel to your overlord,

Children of night!