THE MAN-BIRD

The man-bird harnessed on his wings,

Empowered the impatient heart

And mounted into space as springs

Some captive eagle when released

From durance; but though human art

Might imitate, its genius ceased

Too short to force one secret of

The wild, fierce mastery of flight

In spiral sweeps away, above

The dizziest pinnacle of sight.

Man could but follow as he dared

With plane and engine, chance and nerve,

Yet like a Jove who boldly fared

Across the firmament supreme;

O’er vortexes with plunge and swerve,

O’er air-abysses where the scream

Of harpies echoed mocking forth

On ears too tense—yet ever on

O’er blinding South and blasting North,

Triumphant up or headlong down!

Ten thousand feet on high, ye gods,

Man tries conclusions for your realm

And gambles life at daring odds

To ride above the storm-strewn fleece;

A modern Jason at the helm

By siren lured like him of Greece

To desperate hazard; yet to fail

One pulse-beat for a thrilling glance—

Ah, well the boldest might turn pale

And choose ’twixt glory and mischance!

A moment poised the avian,

Then earthward swooped as never Jove

Rode down the vault of superman.

Wind-surges roared and clouds fled by,

Death raced beside and demons strove

To wrench one slender part or ply;

But flawless-sinewed, man and steed

Came flashing, wheeling down and down

With thrice a Roman courser’s speed

To earth and conqueror’s renown.