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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  William Rose Benét

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

Kites

William Rose Benét

HIGH on the telephone wires, the paltry pitiful thing

Hangs in rags and tatters and loops of string.

A slight breeze shakes it, but cannot shake it down.

It flutters and flutters forgotten above the town.

I hate a stranded kite,

Picked to the bones where the wind has claws that tear

And the rain has teeth that bite.

A child’s is a great despair!

Such a lot of paste

And twine it took, and wrapping or daily paper,

And twists for its tail, lest it cut too great a caper

Up in the cumulous, out in the bellying, buoying air….

Now it hangs there!

My dreams are gorgeous kites like the kites Chinese.

I can feel them tug and yank at my brain, in a breeze,

Shaped like serpent-dragons and whiskered tigers and other eccentric glories,

Such as knights and goblins and beasts out of fairy stories;

Hung with golden tinsel, and silver, and bright red firecracker paper,

Each jumper and twister and japer

That cuts its frolic caper

High in the buoyant blue.

And, high as I fly them, I stand a gaper

At other kites. Do you?

My kites are great gilt angels in garments of blue,

With white-feathered wings I scalloped from song-book pages.

They dip and romp

In happy pomp

High over the tossing trees, and the houses too;

And afloat through the silver of night they fling bright gages

At the hornèd stars with their luminous, twinkling graces.

They sway on the traces

Of comets, and nudge the moon, and smile all the while

The same untiring and ineffable smile …

Is it painted upon their faces?

My kites are huge like elephants, small like mice.

I fly them all in a flock, in spite of advice—

The best advice!

They go up in rainbow brilliance and snow-white storms,

In all shapes and forms.

Well, here’s their memento! here’s the superb ideal

Clutched by the real!

That frail little skeleton flutters between the wires

Till the eyesight tires….

I turn to go—

Somewhat dashed, somewhat dashed, you know!

But regard that bright

Bulge of gold-lit glory that soars o’er those roofs, so white!

Get a golden cord! I must have that cloud for a kite!