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1872–1943

K'U-KIANG

Cale Young Rice

Because the sun like a Chinese lantern Set in a temple of clouds tonight, I was back in K'u-Kiang! Because in a temple of dragon clouds,

As if with incense misty red, It hung there over the rim of the sea, I was back in a narrow street, Where amber faces pass all day,

Going to pay, going to pray, Going the same old human way They have gone for a thousand years, men say, In K'u-Kiang.

And I heard the coolie cry for his fare, I heard the merchant praise his ware Of bronze and porcelain set to snare, In K'u-Kiang!

I saw strange streaming signs in black With gold and crimson on their back — Opiate signs in an opiate street; Where the slip and patter of felt-shod feet

Is old as the sun; And the temple door As cool and dark as the night. And where dim lanterns, swinging there,

As a lure to human grief and care, Half reveal and half conceal The ancestral gloom of the gods. I saw all this with sudden pang,

As if by hashish swept or bhang, Because the sun, like a Chinese lantern, Set in a temple of clouds!

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K'U-KIANG · Cale Young Rice · Poetry Cove