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1872–1943

WORMWOOD

Cale Young Rice

What is he whispering to her there Under the hedge-row spray? “Spring, Spring, Spring?” — Is the world so fair To him, fool, that he has no care

As he cuckoos it all day? Is he quite sure — quite sure the sap Of life's not hate, but love? If I should tell him there's no gap

Between her and a... nameless hap, Would he still want his “dove”? Or would he go as blind to buds As I am, who watch here,

While he is pouring poet floods From his thin lips, and while his blood's Burning for her so near? It would be swords — swords!... And his steel

Should rip death from my breast. But would he ever know the feel Of Spring again, of its ribald reel, As once I did, the best?

No! He would curse henceforward leaf And flower and light — as I. Spring?— It is fire, lust, ashes, grief — All that a Hell can hold, in fief!...

He'll learn it ere he die.

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WORMWOOD · Cale Young Rice · Poetry Cove