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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Loureine Aber

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

City Wed

Loureine Aber

From “City Lanes”

  • The dawn comes to me sweetly, as a soft new child
  • Leans with its soul to drain a bit of milk.
  • And I am new.
  • O gray old city,
  • Lift your head a moment from the pots and streets
  • Wash over me your meaning as a flask of fire
  • Tipped and spilled over at the altar’s base.
  • There are new augurings that go in blue-gray smoke
  • Up from your shops,
  • New lips that rain a torrent in me as of words.
  • Be still a moment, city, while the dawn tells tales.

  • I LIE by the bricks at night—

    Do you think I am lying by you,

    And this is your breast I lean against?

    No. Bricks are my lord—

    With them I shall procreate,

    Until I wake some morning with my litter of stone.

    Not that I want to lie with bricks,

    O beloved of the white limbs and strong neck!

    But how can I help it when they come tumbling—

    These bricks that come fumbling

    At my breast?