Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.
November on the Lake Michigan DunesHoward Mumford Jones
T
Showing a skeleton
When by the pushing wind’s advance
Their coffin is undone,
And in the ribbed and bitter sand
A murdered tree puts out
A white limb like a ghastly hand,
A dead trunk like a snout.
Hidden and veiled and wild,
Now holding silence, each with each,
Now lisping like a child.
And to their speech the waves reply,
The wind and the low waves,
Whispering and wildly wondering why
They talk of ghosts and graves.
They are as sphinxes set
For umpires on these desolate coasts
With life and death at fret:
Life with her grass and juniper,
Death with his cloud of sand,
She strives with him and he with her
Between the lake and land.
His are the sands and wind;
Sometimes his desperate breathing blurs
The air till she grows blind.
She clutches up the dune to seek
Sometime his throat to kill;
And always the troubled waters speak,
Always the sea-gulls shrill.
Storming against the land;
He howls across the hills, his breath
Burdened with snow and sand.
The wind is fellow once with Life,
Sweeping against the sea,
Sweeping across the waves in strife
With Death for enemy.
To him what things are these?
Whether the sand-dunes shoreward shake,
Fleeing the broken seas,
Whether the water be as glass
Or wild beasts without chains,
They change and shift and scud and pass,
Only the wind remains!
Like smoke the blue lake fades,
The hills flow down into the sea,
And night and day like shades
About a carried lantern run,
Jigging alternately,
And star and moon and bolted sun
Slide crazily in the sky.
Dances fantastic-wise
Down to what end, before what tunes,
Beneath what dancing skies!
And blown along like grains of sand
Ourselves must whirl and flee
Before a wind across the land
Into what open sea!