| Ravening through the persistent bric-à-brac
|
| Of blunt pencils, rose-sprigged coffee cup,
|
| Postage stamps, stacked books' clamor and yawp,
|
| Neighborhood cockcrow — all nature’s prodigal backtalk,
|
| The vaunting mind
|
| Snubs impromptu spiels of wind
|
| And wrestles to impose
|
| Its own order on what is.
|
| 'With my fantasy alone,' brags the importunate head,
|
| Arrogant among rook-tongued spaces,
|
| Sheep greens, finned falls, 'I shall compose a crisis
|
| To stun sky black out, drive gibbering mad
|
| Trout, cock, ram,
|
| That bulk so calm
|
| On my jealous stare,
|
| Self-sufficient as they are.'
|
| But no hocus-pocus of green angels
|
| Damasks with dazzle the threadbare eye;
|
| 'My trouble, doctor, is: I see a tree,
|
| And that damn scrupulous tree won’t practice wiles
|
| To beguile sight:
|
| E.g., by cant of light
|
| Concoct a Daphne;
|
| My tree stays tree.
|
| 'However I wrench obstinate bark and trunk
|
| To my sweet will, no luminous shape
|
| Steps out radiant in limb, eye, lip,
|
| To hoodwink the honest earth which pointblank
|
| Spurns such fiction
|
| As nymphs; |
| cold vision
|
| Will have no counterfeit
|
| Palmed off on it.
|
| 'No doubt now in dream-propertied rail some moon-eyed,
|
| Star-lucky sleight-of-hand man watches
|
| My jilting lady squander coin, gold leaf stock ditches,
|
| And the opulent air go studded with seed,
|
| While this beggared brain
|
| Hatches no fortune,
|
| But from leaf, from grass,
|
| Thieves what it has.' |