Читать книгу The Greatest Poems of Frank O'Hara - Frank O’Hara - Страница 13
Poem: "There I could never be a boy"
Оглавлениеto James Schuyler
There I could never be a boy,
though I rode like a god when the horse reared.
At a cry from mother I fell to my knees!
there I fell, clumsy and sick and good,
though I bloomed on the back of a frightened black mare
who had leaped windily at the start of a leaf
and she never threw me.
I had a quick heart
and my thighs clutched her back
I loved her fright, which was against me
into the air! and diamond white of her forelock
which seemed to smart with thoughts as my heart smarted
with life
and she'd toss her head with the pain
and paw the air and champ the bit, as if I were Endymion
and she, moon-like, hated to love me
All thing are tragic
when a mother watches!
and she wishes upon herself
the random fears of a scarlet soul, as it breathes in and out
and nothing chokes, or breaks from triumph to triumph!
I knew her but I could not be a boy,
for in the billowing air I was fleet and green
riding blackly through the ethereal night
towards men's words which I gracefully understood,
and it was given to me
as the soul is given the hands
to hold the ribbons of life1
as miles streak by beneath the moon's sharp hooves
and I have mastered the speed and strenght which is the
armor of the world