Читать книгу Backblock Ballads and Later Verses - Clarence Michael James Stanislaus Dennis - Страница 9

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The Chase of Ages

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Light of my lives! Is the time not yet?

Lo, I've brooded on a star

Through many a year, with the hope held dear

That, in some future far,

I would know the joy of a love returned.

Are my lives lived vainly, all,

Since that cosmic morn when life, new-born,

First moved on this mundane ball?

Yea, I mind it yet, when first we met

On a tertiary rock,

How the graceful charm of your rudiments

Imparted love's first shock.

But I was a mere organic cell

In that early Eocene,

While you were a prim, primordial germ,

And the mother of protogene.

So I loved and died, and the ages sped

Till the time of my second birth;

When I took my place in the cosmic race,

And again came down to earth.

Once more we met. Ah, Love, not yet!

You were far above my state!

For how could I raise my mollusc gaze

To a virtuous vertebrate?

Again we died, and again we slept,

And again we came to be—

I as an anthropoidal ape,

And you as a chimpanzee.

You as a charming chimpanzee,

With a high patrician air;

And I watched you waltz from tree to tree

As I slunk in my lowly lair.

And yet again, in an age or so,

We met, and I mind the sob

I sobbed when I found that I was—what?

And you were a thingumbob.

You had sold your tail for a kind of soul,

You had grown two thumbs beside;

And I knew again that my love was vain,

So I went to the woods and died.

As a humble homunculus, later on,

I crept to your cave at night,

And howled long, love-lorn howls in vain

To my lady troglodyte.

And I grew insane at your cold disdain,

And my howlings filled the place,

Till your father sought me out one night,

And again I yearned in space.

Then, Light of my lives! Is the time not yet?

Say, in what distant life—

In what dim age that is still to come

May I win and call you wife?

Still high above! My Love, my Love!

Nay, how can I raise my eyes

To you, my Star of the Eocene,

My ever elusive prize?

Lo, Time speeds on, the suns grow cold,

And the earth infirm and hoar,

And, ages past, we are here at last—

Ay, both on the earth once more.

But, alas, Dear Heart, as far apart

As e'er in this cosmic whirl;

For I'm but a lowly writer-man

And you are a tea-room girl.

Backblock Ballads and Later Verses

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