Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.
Qualche Cosa VedutaHall Roffey
T
And the lights of the world centred in a yellow iris
Flaming upwards from the straight stem.
Dark gray like the mould.
Tall, slim, golden lilies on her dress were woven.
The iris joined her, for a moment they walked together.
The woman faded
for ever.
His legs short like a tortoise, his body long and baggy;
His face was ugly, the nose knobbed, the lines and wrinkles alive.
He folded a newspaper with work-distorted hands.
He ambled on; drab, worn, and shabby,
Shuffling the dim sands.
The iris joined him, they marched on together.
And the light of the world centres in a yellow iris:
The old man and the iris march on forever.