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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Leonora Speyer

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

In Praise of Abrigada

Leonora Speyer

I HAD been told

A foolish tale—

Of stone—dank—cold:

But you,

Held to wide winter storm,

To clutch of blackening frost and ocean gale,

Are warm!

I thought that stone was silent too,

Unmoved by beauty,

Unaware of season or of mirth:

But I hear laughter, singing, as I lay

My face against your gray;

Surely I hear the ritual of far waves

And scent their winging spray,

Mixed with wild-rose and honeysuckle,

Budding sassafras,

And the cool breath of pungent, leafy bay.

I knew that walls were sheltering

And strong;

But you have sheltered love so long

That love is part

Of your high towering,

Lifting you higher still,

As heart lifts heart….

Hush!

How the whip-poor-will

Wails from his bush:

The thrush

Grows garrulous with delight!

There is a rapture in that liquid monotone,

“Bob White! Bob—White!”

Dear living stone!

…………

In the great room below,

Where arches hold the listening spaces,

Flames crackle, leap and gleam

In the deep fire-places;

Memories dream …

Of other memories, perhaps,

Of gentle lives,

Of births, and of those other births that men call death,

Of voices, foot-steps tapping the stone floor,

And faces … faces …

Beyond, the open door,

The meadows drowsy with the moon,

The faint outline of dune,

The lake, the silver magic in the trees:

Walls, you are one with these!

…………

High on the loggia-roof,

Under the stars as pale as they,

Two silent ones have crept away,

Seeking the deeper silence lovers know:

Into the radiant shadows of the night,

Into the aching beauty of the night,

They dare to go!

The moon

Is a vast cocoon,

Spinning her wild, white thread

Across the sky.

A thousand crickets croon

Their sharp-edged lullaby.

I hear a murmuring of lips on lips:

“All that I am, beloved!

All!”—

Lovers’ eternal cry!

Lift them still higher, wall!

…………

You stand serene:

The great winds linger, lean

Upon your breast;

The mist

Lifts up a gray face to be kissed;

The east and west

Hang you with banners,

Flaunt their bold victories of dusk and dawn;

Seasons salute you as they pass,

Call to you and are gone.

Amid your meadow-grass

Lush, green,

You stand serene.

…………

Houses, like hearts, are living, loving,

Joyful or woeful,

Forget or are forgot;

Houses, like tired hearts,

Sicken at last, and die,

Crumble and rot:

But they who know you, Abrigada,

They—and I—

Forget you not!

…………

Nor they who stand on Abrigada’s roof,

Glowing, aloof!

…………

Come with me now,

Climb with me, stand, look down

In new content of mood,

Withdrawn from clasp of crowd

And tangle of the town!

Climb swifter still—

From safe companionship of cloud

The deeper to look down!

Not back!

Forget the thirst, the sordid cup,

The plethora, the piteous lack;

Forget the trafficking in tears,

The arrogance of scars.

Look up …

To dream undaunted dreams aloud,

And stumble toward the stars!

…………

This be in praise

Of Abrigada;

In all the ways

That come to me

Through the wise, wistful summer days.

In speech, in rhyme and rhythm of word

Call it a poem, maybe!

In song—tuck the brown shining wood

Under my chin!

Call it my bird,

My heart,

My violin!

In prayer …

In dream …

In silence, best of all,

Leaning on the beloved dew-drenched wall.

Leaning and lifting …

High …

With Abrigada’s gesture toward the sky.