Ra-Hoor-Khuit Network's
		Magickal Library
			
Transcribed by Darryl Lee Emplit III' of O.T.O.
			January, 1995 e.v. first proof reading, more needed.
			by Darryl Lee Emplit III' of O.T.O.
			Greek translations by Mbabwa. Greek titles marked by an asterisk.
			ASCII Text Standard / Copyright (c) O.T.O.
WHITE STAINS
			
			THE LITERARY REMAINS OF GEORGE ARCHIBALD BISHOP
			A NEUROPATH OF THE SECOND EMPIRE
			
			(Aleister Crowley)
			
			1898 
			
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			The Editor hopes that Mental Pathologists, 
			for whose eyes alone this treatise is destined, will spare no 
			precaution to prevent it falling into other hands
			
			
			
			Une nouvelle Phedre a lui moins dure
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			PREFACE
			
			
			In the fevered days and nights under the Empire that perished in the 
			struggle of 1870, that whirling tumult of pleasure, scheming, 
			success, and despair, the minds of men had a trying ordeal to pass 
			through. In Zola's 'La Curee' we see how such ordinary and natural 
			characters as those of Saccard, Maxime, and the incestuous heroine, 
			were twisted and distorted from their normal sanity, and sent 
			whirling into the jaws of a hell far more effrayant than the mere 
			cheap and nasty brimstone Sheol which is a Shibboleth for the 
			dissenter, and with which all classes of religious humbug, from the 
			Pope to the Salvation ranter, from the Mormon and the Jesuit to that 
			mongrel mixture of the worst features of both, the Plymouth Brother, 
			have scared their illiterate, since hypocrisy was born, with Abel, 
			and spiritual tyranny, with Jehovah! Society, in the long run, is 
			eminently sane and practical; under the Second Empire it ran mad. If 
			these things are done in the green tree of Society, what shall be 
			done in the dry tree of Bohemianism? Art always has a suspicion to 
			fight against; always some poor mad Max Nordau is handy to call 
			everything outside the kitchen the asylum. Here, however, there is a 
			substratum of truth. Consider the intolerable long roll of names, 
			all tainted with glorius madness. Baudelaire the diabolist, 
			debauchee of sadism, whose dreams are nightmares, and whose waking 
			hours delirium; Rollinat the necrophile, the poet of phthisis, the 
			anxiomaniac; Peladan, the high priest -- of nonsense; Mendes, 
			frivolous and scoffing sensualist; besides a host of others, most 
			alike in this, that, below the cloak of madness and depravity, the 
			true heart of genius burns. No more terrible [3] period than this is 
			to be found in literature; so many great minds, of which hardly one 
			comes to fruition; such seeds of genius, such a harvest of -- 
			whirlwind! Even a barren waste of sea is less saddening than one 
			strewn with wreckage.
			In England such wild song found few followers of any worth or 
			melody. Swinburne stands on his solitary pedestal above the vulgar 
			crowds of priapistic plagiarists; he alone caught the fierst frenzy 
			of Baudelaire's brandied shrieks, and his First Series of Poems and 
			Ballads was the legitimate echo of that not fierier note. But 
			English Art as a whole was unmoved, at any rate not stirred to any 
			depth, by this wave of debauchery. The great thinkers maintained the 
			even keel, and the windy waters lay nor for their frailer barks to 
			cross. There is one exception of note, till this day unsuspected, in 
			the person of George Archibald Bishop. In a corner of Paris this 
			young poet (for in his nature the flower of poesy did spring, did 
			even take root and give some promise of a brighter bloom, till 
			stricken and blasted in latter years by the lightning of his own 
			sins) was steadily writing day after day, night after night, often 
			working forty hours at a time, work which he destined to entrance 
			the world. All England should ring with his praises; bye-and-bye the 
			whole world should know his name. Of these works none of the longer 
			and more ambitious remains. How they were lost, and how those 
			fragments we possess were saved, is best told by relating the 
			romantic and almost incredible story of his life.
			The known facts of this life are few, vague, and unsatisfactory; the 
			more definite statements lack corroboration, and almost the only 
			source at the disposal of the biographer is the letters of Mathilde 
			Doriac to Mdme [4] J. S., who has kindly placed her portfolio at my 
			service. A letter dated Oct.
			15th, 1866 indicates that our author was born on the 23rd of that 
			month. The father and mother of George were, at least on the 
			surface, of an extraordinary religious turn of mind. Mathilde's 
			version of the story, which has it's source in our friend himself, 
			agrees almost word for word with a letter of the Rev.
			Edw. Turle to Mrs. Cope, recommending the child to her care. The 
			substance of the story is as follows.
			The parents of George carried their religious ideas to the point of 
			never consummating their marriage! This arrangement does not seem to 
			have been greatly appreciated by the wife at least; one fine morning 
			she was found to be enceinte. The foolish father never thought of 
			the hypothesis which commends itself most readily to a man of the 
			world, not to say a man of science, and adopted that of a second 
			Messiah! He took the utmost pains to conceal the birth of the child, 
			treated everybody who came to the house as an emissary of Herod, and 
			finally made up his mind to flee into Egypt! Like most religious 
			maniacs, he never had an idea of his own, but distorted the 
			beautiful and edifying events of the Bible into insane and 
			ridiculous ones, which he proceeded to plagiarize.
			On the voyage out the virgin mother became enamoured, as was her 
			wont, of the nearest male, in this case a fellow-traveller.
			He, being well able to support her in the luxury which she desired, 
			easily persuaded her to leave the boat with him by stealth. A small 
			sailing vessel conveyed them to Malta, where they disappeared. The 
			only trace left in the books of earth records that this fascinating 
			character was accused, four years later, in Vienna, of poisoning her 
			paramour, but thanks to the wealth and influence of her new lover, 
			she escaped. [5]
			The legal father, left by himself with a squalling child to amuse, 
			to appease in his tantrums, and to bring up in the nurture and 
			admonition of the Lord, was not a little perplexed by the sudden 
			disappearance of his wife. At first he supposed that she had been 
			translated, but, finding that she had not left the traditional 
			mantle behind her, he abandoned this supposition in favour of a 
			quite different, and indeed a more plausible one. He now believed 
			her to be the scarlet woman in the Apocalypse, with variations. On 
			arrival in Egypt he hired an old native nurse, and sailed for 
			Odessa. Once in Russia he could find Gog and Magog, and present to 
			them the child as Antichrist. For he was now pursuaded that he 
			himself was the First Beast, and would ask the sceptic to count his 
			seven heads and ten horns. The heads, however, rarely totted up 
			accurately!
			At this point the accounts of Mr. Turtle and Mathilde diverge 
			slightly. The cleric affirms that he was induced by a Tartar lady, 
			of an honourable and ancient profession, to accompany her to Thibet 
			'to be initiated into the mysteries'. He was, of course, robbed and 
			murdered with due punctuality, in the town of Kiev. Mathilde's story 
			is that he travelled to Kiev on the original quest, and died of 
			typhoid or cholera. In any case, he died at Kiev in 1839. This fixes 
			the date of the child's birth at 1837. His faithful nurse conveyed 
			him safely to England, where his relatives provided for his 
			maintenance and education.
			With the close of this romantic chapter in his early history we lose 
			all reliable traces for some years. One flash alone illumines the 
			darkness of his boyhood; in 1853, after being prepared for 
			confirmation, he cried out in full assembly, instead of kneeling to 
			receive the blessing of the officiating bishop, 'I renounce for ever 
			this idolatrous church'; and was quietly removed. [6]
			He told Mathilde Doriac that he had been to Eton and Cambridge - 
			neither institution, however, preserves any record of such 
			admission. The imagination of George, indeed, is tremendously 
			fertile with regard to events in his own life. His own story is that 
			he entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1856, and was sent down 
			two years later for an article which he had contributed to some 
			University or College Magazine. No confirmation of any sort is to be 
			found anywhere with regard to these or any other statements of our 
			author. There is, however, no doubt that in 1861 he quarrelled with 
			his family; went over to Paris, where he settled down, at first, 
			like every tufthead, somewhere in the Quartier Latin; later, with 
			Mathilde Doriac, the noble woman who became his mistress and held to 
			him through all the terrible tragedy of his moral, mental, and 
			physical life, in the Rue du Faubourg-Poissonniere. At his house 
			there the frightful scenes of '68 took place, and it was there too 
			that he was apprehended after the murders which he describes so 
			faithfully in 'Abysmos'. He had just finished this poem with a 
			shriek of triumph, and he had read it through to the appalled 
			Mathilde 'avec des yeux de flamme et de gestes incoherentes', when, 
			foaming at the mouth, and 'hurlant de blasphemes indicibles', he 
			fell upon her with extraordinary violence of passion; the door 
			opened, officers appeared, the arrest was effected. He was committed 
			to an asylum, for there could be no longer any doubt of his complete 
			insanity; for three weeks he had been raving with absinthe, and 
			satyriasis. He survived his confinement no long time; the burning of 
			the asylum with its inmates was one of the most terrible events of 
			the war of 1870.
			So died one of the most talented Englishmen of his century, a man 
			who for wide knowledge of men and things was truly to be envied, yet 
			one [7] who sold his birthright for a mess of beastlier pottage than 
			ever Esau guzzled, who sold soul and body to Satan for sheer love of 
			sin, whose mere lust of perversion is so intense that it seems to 
			absorb every other emotion and interest.
			Never since God woke light from chaos has such a tragedy been 
			unrolled before men, step after step toward the lake of Fire!
			At his house all his writings were seized, and, it is believed, 
			destroyed. The single most fortunate exception is that of a superbly 
			jewelled writing-case, now in the possession of the present editor, 
			in which were found the MSS. which are here published. Mathilde, who 
			knew how he treasured its contents, preserved it by saying to the 
			officer, 'But, sir, that is mine.'
			On opening this it was found to contain, beside these MSS., his 
			literary will. All MSS. were to be published thirty years after his 
			death, not before. He would gain no spurious popularity as a 
			reflection of the age he lived in. 'Tennyson,' he says, 'will die 
			before sixty years are gone by : if I am to be beloved of men, it 
			shall be because my work is for all times and all men, because it is 
			greater than all the gods of chance and change, because it has the 
			heart of the human race beating in every line. This is a patch of 
			magenta to mauve, undoubtedly; but - ! The present collection of 
			verses will hardly be popular; if the lost works turn up, of course 
			it may be that there may be found 'shelter for songs that recede.' 
			Still, even here, one is, on the whole, more attracted than 
			repelled; the author has enormous power, and he never scurples to 
			use it, to drive us half mad with horror, or, as in his earlier most 
			exquisite works, to move us to the noblest thoughts and deeds. True, 
			his debt to contemporary writers is a little obvious here and there; 
			but these are small blemishes on a series of [8] poems whose 
			originality is always striking, and often dreadful, in its broader 
			features.
			We cannot leave George Bishop without a word of enquiry as to what 
			became of the heroic figure of Mathilde Doriac. It is a bitter task 
			to have to write in cold blood the dreadful truth about her death. 
			She had the misfortune to contract, in the last few days of her life 
			with him, the same terrible disease which he describes in the last 
			poem of this collection. This shock, coming so soon after, and, as 
			it were, as an unholy perpetual reminder of the madness and 
			sequestration of her lover, no less than of his infidelity, unhinged 
			her mind, and she shot herself on July 5th, 1869. Her last letter to 
			Madame J... S... is one of the tenderest and most pathetic ever 
			written. She seems to have been really loved by George, in his wild, 
			infidel fashion: 'All Night' and 'Victory', among others, are 
			obviously inspired by her beauty; and her devotion to him, the 
			abasement of soul, the prostitution of body, she underwent for and 
			with him, is one of the noblest stories life has known. She seems to 
			have dived with him, yet ever trying to raise his soul from the 
			quagmire; if God is just at all, she shall stand more near to His 
			right hand than the vaunted virgins who would soil no hem of vesture 
			to save their brother from the worm that dieth not!
			The Works of George Archibald Bishop will speak for themselves; it 
			would be both impertinent and superfluous in me to point out in 
			detail their many and varied excellences, or their obvious faults. 
			The raison d'etre, though, of their publication, is worthy of 
			especial notice. I refer to their psychological sequence, which 
			agrees with their chronological order. His life-history, as well as 
			his literary remains, gives us an idea of the pro- [9] gression of 
			diabolism as it really is; not as it is painted. Note also, (1) the 
			increase of selfishness in pleasure, (2) the diminution of his 
			sensibility to physical charms. Pure and sane is his early work; 
			then he is carried into the outer current of the great vortex of 
			Sin, and whirls lazily through the sleepy waters of mere sensualism; 
			the pace quickens, he grows fierce in the mysteries of Sapphism and 
			the cult of Venus Aversa with women; later of the same forms of vice 
			with men, all mingled with wild talk of religious dogma and a 
			general exaltation of Priapism at the expense, in particular, of 
			Christianity, in which religion, however, he is undoubtedly a 
			believer till the last (the pious will quote James 2, 19, and the 
			infidel will observe that he died in an asylum); then the full swing 
			of the tide catches him, the mysteries of death become more and more 
			an obsession, and he is flung headlong into Sadism, Necrophilia, all 
			the maddest, fiercest vices that the mind of fiends ever brought up 
			from the pit. But always to the very end his power is unexhausted, 
			immense, terrible. His delirium does not amuse; it appals! A man who 
			could conceive as he did must himself have had some glorius chord in 
			his heart vibrating to the eternal principle of Boundless Love. That 
			this love was wrecked is for me, in some sort a relative of his, a 
			real and bitter sorrow. He might have been so great! He missed 
			Heaven! Think kindly of him! 
			[10]
			
			
			
			DEDICACE
			
			You crown me king and queen. There is a name
			For whose soft sound I would abandon all
			This pomp. I liefer would have had you call
			Some soft sweet title of beloved shame.
			Gold coronets be seemly, but bright flame
			I choose for diadem; I would let fall
			All crowns, all kingdoms, for one rhythmical
			Caress of thine, one kiss my soul to tame.
			
			You crown me king and queen; I crown thee lover!
			I bid thee hasten, nay, I plead with thee,
			Come in the thick dear darkness to my bed.
			Heed not my sighs, but eagerly uncover,
			As our mouths mingle, my sweet infamy,
			And rob thy lover of his maidenhead.
			
			Lie close; no pity, but a little love.
			Kiss me but once and all my pain is paid.
			Hurt me or soothe, stretch out one limb above
			Like a strong man who would constrain a maid.
			Touch me; I shudder and my lips turn back
			Over my shoulder if so be that thus
			My mouth may find thy mouth, if aught there lack
			To thy desire, till love is one with us.
			
			[11]
			
			
			God! I shall faint with pain, I hide my face
			For shame. I am disturbed, I cannot rise,
			I breathe hard with thy breath; thy quick embrace
			Crushes; thy teeth are agony - pain dies
			In deadly passion. Ah! you come - you kill me!
			Christ! God! Bite! Bite! Ah Bite! Love's fountains fill me.
			
			[12]
			
			
			
			
			
			
			PREFATORY
			
			SONNET TO THE VIRGIN MARY
			
			
			Mother of God! who knowest the dire pangs
			Of childbirth, and has suffered, and dost know
			How utter sweet the full fruit of thy woe,
			And how His heel hath crushed the serpent's fangs,
			Be with me in the birth of this my book,
			These songs of mine, poor children, like to die;
			Yet, if they may not perish utterly,
			It is to thee for sustenance I look.
			
			
			Mother of God! be with me in success,
			Abide with me if peradventure fail
			These faint songs, murmurs of a summer gale
			That my heart clothes within a mortal dress;
			And with thy sympathy, their bliss or bale
			Shall be too light to shake my happiness.
			
			
			
			[13]
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			
			A FRAGMENT
			
			Man Hero
			Maid Heroine
			Her Mother
			Count B
			
			
			He. Draw nigh, sweet maiden, violets blush at birth,
			Pale lilies tinge with crimson, as the snow
			At dawn's approach, the pansy's darksome dye
			Deepens when tender winds blow over it
			And give its beauties to the summer's gaze:
			So blush at being mine, yet gently come
			And place a dainty hand within my hold
			Too delicate to crush it into warmth,
			Save that blood mantling to thy cheek shall flow
			Back to the fingers, though I press them not.
			
			And so I will not hesitate to put
			A ring upon thy hand, sweet mystery
			Of Love's device, to shadow in our hearts
			Th' Eternity of an immortal self
			That is, and shall be while the stars endure,
			Or while a God of Love is pitiful
			Of all men's sorrows, and most happy in [15]
			Their joys-
			She. Ah! joys are fleeting!-
			He. But our love
			Is anchored in the portals of the dawn
			Where heaven begins.
			She. And heaven begins with us
			This day. Behold the flowers, whose kindly gaze
			Of modest love is on us as we stand,
			And clasp fond hands before high Heaven to swear
			Truth an eternal bond, no parchment scroll
			Of perishable matter ill devised
			And scored upon with perishable ink,
			But in our pulses' quick delight to live
			From day to day renewed, as if a fount
			Of God's mysterious stream, that here a man
			May wet his ankle, and again immerse
			Unto his knees, and yet again assay
			To cross its silver depth and find himself
			Swimming in crystal coldness on a sea
			Broad as God's mercy and as deep as Love.
			He. And whose strong tide shall bear our spirit out
			Into the ocean of all happiness
			Whose bounds are Heaven.
			She. See! the scythe of Time
			Sweeps on to cut the new-born flowers in twain
			That symbolizes the reluctant hour [16]
			In which we met - and now the flower is dead
			And we must part.
			He. Fond hearts, chaste souls, as one
			Whose unity is sacred, still shall dwell
			Together - Not the cold embrace
			Of 'We shall meet again', but let us say
			The ritual of a lover, being this
			'God be with you!'
			She. O heart too dear to me,
			Too much beloved for lover's tongue to tell,
			God be with you! Farewell, sweet heart!
			He. Farewell.
			(EXEUNT).
			DESUNT CETERA.
			
			
			[17]
			
			
			THE RAINBOW
			
			On land wrought of starlight rain lingers
			In delicate spirals and spines,
			And sunlight's immaculate fingers
			Creep through the desire of the pines;
			The promise is flashed into being,
			Tremendous and florid and proud,
			To be seen by the eyes of the seeing,
			A bow in the cloud.
			
			O flamed through the sky as a harlot
			In splendour transcendent and bold,
			With purple and crimson and scarlet
			And azure and olive and gold!
			O melting to magic and mystery,
			As clouds fly to heaven again,
			And holy Hyperion's history
			Is flashed into rain!
			
			O Godhead of glory through anguish!
			O Christ shone through Magdalen's tears!
			Thy sons on the universe languish
			In iron bands strong as the spheres;
			With virtue Thy likeness we cover, [18]
			With priestcraft we mock at Thy power,
			And the meanest on earth is a lover,
			As vile as a flower.
			
			Come down through the visionless aether,
			And watch for the sprout of the grain
			Hid dark in the wonder beneath her,
			A marvel of passion and pain;
			Smite power from on high into mortals,
			Draw spirit to spirit and nigher,
			That winds burst the wonderful portals
			And tongues as of fire.
			
			O Life of the stars in their glory,
			O Light of the passionate spring,
			How sweet and supreme is thy story,
			Most Wonderful, Counsellor, King!
			O crucified, slain, re-arisen!
			Burst open the fetters that bind,
			Change from us the garb of our prison
			And lighten the mind.
			
			
			O Spring, tell the bountiful Giver
			Thy smiles on the world are in vain;
			Come down, O Lord God, and deliver
			Our souls from the wheel and the chain, [19]
			That Love may lie fragrant and shaded,
			And Joy may spread wings unto flight,
			And Peace stand above, unupbraided,
			As splendid as night.
			
			No longer the sun shall cast shadow,
			No longer the flower shall lack rain,
			The word shall be fair as a meadow,
			And Love know no tincture of pain;
			The Glory of God shall be on us,
			And over the kingdon unpriced
			The Spirit of Love is upon us,
			A crucified Christ!
			
			O rapture! O glory! O gladness!
			When Satan is fled from the land,
			When Christ cleanses sin, and from madness
			Deletes its indelible brand;
			For life shall spring where they have smitten,
			And Love rise from under the rod,
			Till all men behold what is written,
			The kingdom of God! [20]
			
			
			
			WITH A COPY OF 'POEMS AND BALLADS'
			
			Bon Pantagruel, je t'offre ces lyriques,
			Vu que tu aimes, comme moi, ces mots
			Des roideurs sadiques d'un grand jambot,
			Des sacrees lysses de l'amour saphique.
			
			Accepte donc comme temoin complet
			D'amitie, ce petit don, qui dit
			Toutes les delices de rose et lys,
			Ces fleurs odorantes du sadinet!
			
			Oublie donc, en lisant, toute faute
			De moi qui ecris cette dedicace
			Faible, d'une lyre mal attunee;
			Souviens-toi seul de l'admiration haute
			Qui a fait naitre, d'eternelle grace,
			La fleur d'une loyale amitie. [21]
			
			
			
			AD LYDIAM, UT SECUM A MARITO FUGERET
			
			I
			
			The bird has chosen, and the world of spring
			Under Love's banner is enrolled, but thou,
			Chained to the iron couch of wedlock fast,
			Art mourning while all nature else doth sing
			The deep delights of Love. Still on thy brow
			Lurks the dark shade, thy smile is overcast
			With fear of the world's thought, and lips of love
			Pale at that spectre, imminent, immense,
			Cold Chastity, the child of Impotence,
			And eyes grow dim with grey distrust thereof.
			Forget, dear heart, forget; life's glow is sweet:
			Come to a lover's arms that grow divine
			At the first eloquent embrace of thine,
			While pulses in wild unison warmly beat.
			
			2
			
			I know a vally walled with glistening steep
			Of fire-hewn rock, and stately cliff of ice,
			Filled with green lawns and forests black with pine,
			Where the clear stream shall sing us into sleep
			With murmuring faintly, and devine device:
			Come with me there, and we will surely twine [22]
			Bright wreaths of Alpine gentian for thine head,
			Those glowing tresses, auburn in the sun,
			And in the night, dim fires of matchless red
			To hold my love, and lead my kisses on
			From night to night upon the purple bed
			Of dark embraces; till the summer is gone
			We will forget in love the world of tears
			Whose tumult reaches not our amorous ears.
			
			3
			
			Come with me thither. Let the chaster snow
			Blush at the sunset, when our limbs grow fain
			To twine close caressing, let it blush
			Redder at sunrise, when our eyelids grow
			Weary of kissing, and our arms again
			Slowly unclasp, and our fair cheeks do flush
			With memory's modesty. The mountains glow
			Warmer and whiter, dreamland's power shall wane
			While the sun tints the beauty of the bush
			And all the forest with his finger-tips
			Of budding fire, and we surprised will wake
			While Shadow's brush in darker colour dips,
			And roam about the valley, and will take
			Fresh delicate delight, with smiling lips. [23]
			
			4
			
			Summer may die, but on the azure sea
			That girdles warmer lands the sun will gleam;
			There will we wander, over dale and how,
			Sweet with green sward, faint flower, and tender tree.
			There all the winter may we idly dream
			Still of our love, and there forgetfulness
			Of the past sorrow may steal o'er thy brow
			In the new birth of stainless happiness,
			Rich harvest of the blossoms desire,
			Satisfied alway, yet for ever fresh
			In hearts so passionate, and there may'st thou
			Love to thy fulness, nor for ever tire
			Of linking me to thee with dainty mesh
			Of auburn ripples of delicious fire.
			
			5
			
			Doubt not, dear love, nor hesitate to say;
			Blush if thou wilt; I love to see thy cheek
			Grow hot with love-thoughts - let the word be said:
			Between shy finger whisper me the 'yea!'
			My soul will leap to hear, as thine to speak.
			Remember Love, forget the loveless bed;
			Forget thy husband, and the cruel wreck
			Of thy dear life on Wedlock's piteous sands; [24]
			Love's all in all, link on the golden bands
			Forged in heaven without flaw or fleck.
			I know thine answer by these amorous hands
			That touch me thus to tempt me, by the kiss
			Whose sudden passion burns upon my neck
			Thy heart clings to me in perfect 'Yes!' [25]
			
			
			
			
			CONTRA CONJUGIUM T.B.B.
			
			Anathema foederis nefandi, jugeris immondi, flagitii contra
			Amorem, contra Naturam, contra Deum, in saecula praesit
			Amen! Cum comminatione pastorum improborum, Ecclesiae
			malae, qui tales nuptias benedicunt.
			
			Through nave and chancel drone the choir,
			Their chant rolls through the darkened aisle;
			Their song soars up beyond the spire;
			The priest prepares; there waits his smile
			A deed most vile.
			
			Harken, thou fool at altar-rails
			The still small awful voice of fear
			Whereat earth shakes and heaven pales --
			'I am the Lord'; His voice rings clear:
			'What dost thou here?
			
			'Thou hast despised my laws, and stilled
			The voice of Nature and my voice,
			Now, shall thy life with joy be filled?
			At thine own time shalt thou rejoice?
			At thine own choice? [26]
			
			'I gave thee life, I gave thee youth,
			Four seasons fair, for love the same,
			Health, strength and comeliness -- forsooth,
			And thou hast quenched my holy flame,
			And scorned my name!
			
			'I gave thee life, life passeth by;
			I gave thee youth, that youth is fled.
			Thinkst thou that I will fructify
			Now, at thine own good time, thy dead
			And barren bed?
			
			'How worship me, yet break my laws?
			Art thou a God? Didst thou devise
			The infinite world? Did thy word cause
			The silver Caucasus to arise?
			Art thou all-wise?
			
			'Or hast thou mocked me, setting high
			A molten calf, a graven block,
			A fetish foul, a devil's lie,
			And worshipped that? Thou shalt not mock,
			Thou barren rock!
			
			'Thou shalt not mock! Cold Chastity,
			Father and child of Impotence, [27]
			Whom thou hast set on high for me,
			From her foul shrine shall chase thee thence:
			'Avoid, get hence!'
			
			'And I -- thou shalt not scorn my word,
			All Nature sets it scorn on thee;
			Sweet flower and stream, swift fish and bird,
			Shall chorus out 'Thou fruitless tree!
			Thou salt dry sea!'
			
			'I will not aid thee in thine age,
			Nor heed thee in thy piteous strait;
			Live thou in thine own empty cage,
			Forged every day that thou didst wait
			Too long, too late!
			
			'Shall I turn back the seasons past,
			Recall sun's shine and cloudlet's fleece,
			Revive the ghosts of aeons vast,
			And bid the scythe of Chronos cease
			For thy caprice?
			
			'Because thou wilt, shall I accede
			And change my laws that I have made
			Shall I make grapes from thorn and weed,
			Fresh water from the fountains stayed,
			If thou hast prayed? [28]
			
			'For thine outcry bring chaos back,
			Turn over earth and heaven to hell,
			And listen 'mid the roar and wrack,
			With pleasure to creation's knell,
			Thy marriage bell?
			
			'I will not turn the Red Sea back
			That thou mayst pass again dry-shod:
			Thou hast chosen, thou shalt live the black
			Dry years out till thou cleave the sod,
			And meet thy God.
			
			'What are thy good deeds? This one thing
			Thou hast not done. This chiefest task
			Thou wouldst not do. And shall the King
			Of Kings do only what men ask?
			Thou empty mask!
			
			'Repentance is too late, lost fool,
			Dead flower, salt fountain, rusty sword,
			This curse is on thee for thy dule,
			That thou shalt know and be assured
			I am the Lord.'
			
			The loud-voiced choir would drown in song
			The voice of God; their music woke [29]
			Echoes through chancel weird and long --
			In thunder and fierce fire and smoke
			Jehovah spoke.
			
			'On with the farce! My perjured priests,
			The wolves that raven through my flock,
			Nay, wolves in shepard's garb, wild beasts
			That fang and tear my lambs, and mock
			At Judah's stock.
			
			'On with the grim foul farce! Black hell
			Gapes to receive all actors there.
			Play on its brink! What soul can tell
			But I, your God, may be as air,
			A children's snare?
			
			'But I am here, I will not heed,
			I will not give more signs; But I
			Will come with heavy hand and deed
			And give men knowledge ere they die
			How their priests lie.
			
			'A gospel marred, a bastard creed,
			A dogma out of hell ye teach!
			False shepards, ye shall learn your meed;
			Not as waves breaking on the beach
			My wrath shall reach! [30]
			
			'I forget not -- heed not my cry,
			Play out the farce, wed fast the twain! --
			Red judgement and black death draw nigh,
			Your blasphemies shall all be vain,
			And your souls slain.
			
			'Vipers! on him my mercy falls
			Perchance, at last, in heaven; but ye
			I will sepulchre in black walls
			Of Hell, burn up and hide from me
			'Neath the blind sea!
			
			'Vipers! eternal fire shall quench
			Your prayers and curses, hell shall hold
			The vapourous vomit of your stench
			Wrung from foul souls, no longer bold
			But cowed and cold.
			
			'Vipers! his fooly I will heal,
			Your sin I will not put away;
			My Christ is vain for you; appeal
			In vain to his shed blood; nor pray
			I will not slay.
			
			'I will most utterly destroy
			Your souls from off the earth; your power [31]
			Sealed by your Satan I will cloy
			With subtle strength; your church shall flower
			No further hour.
			
			'Because ye set your hands to this,
			Blaspheming nature and my name,
			Cemented the unholy kiss
			Of barren age's fruitless shame
			Your hell shall flame
			
			'Seven times more hot, that ye may know
			My paths shall be most surely trod,
			That I who answer thus, who show
			Myself in wielding sword and rod,
			Am high Lord God!'
			
			Silent the voice, and through the nave
			And chancel droned the choir; the sun
			Darkened, as Satan's perjured slave,
			The priest, in blessing, made them one.
			The Deed was done. [32]
			
			
			A BALLAD OF CHOOSING
			
			Love brought a garland to my feet to-day
			Offering to crown my head withal, and said:
			'The year is young, it is the time of May,
			Autumn is distant, and the winter, dead'
			And would therewith my brows have garlanded
			But that I asked him 'Is not this a fire
			To burn the scorched brain through my maddened head?
			Thou has a guerdon, is it not for hire?'
			
			Fame brought a golden crown, bejewelled o'er
			With precious rubies beyond price, and cried
			'The world is young, thy name shall evermore
			Ring in men's ears, stately and glorified'
			But I, with shuddering lips, to him replied
			'Fame is the aramanth that fools desire
			My soul's price is beyond thy jewel's pride
			Thou has a guerdon, is it not for hire?'
			
			'Wealth brought to me a purse, whose glancing gold
			Mocked the sun's rays, grown dull as iron rust,
			And pressed it in my hand, saying 'Behold
			The corner-stone of fame, the means of lust'
			And I 'In thee I put but little trust [33]
			Shameful, most vile, accursed of God's ire,
			Dross of the dunghill's most detested dust,
			Thou has a guerdon, is it not for hire?'
			
			Christ came to me, alone and sorrowful,
			And offered me a cross, saying to me,
			'I have great joys to give most bountiful.
			Carry this through the world, and when the sea
			Of death is past, then is prepared for thee
			A house of many mansions.' My desire
			Hid not from me the vileness of his plea:--
			'Thou has a guerdon, is it not for hire?'
			
			ENVOI
			
			Prince of the air, thou offerest nought to me
			I serve thee, recompensed of hell-fire,
			More nobly than these others, verily
			Since none with impious word may mock at thee
			'Thou has a guerdon, is it not for hire?' [34]
			
			
			
			A JEALOUS LOVER
			
			I
			
			I have an idol wrought of stainless gold
			Before whose feet I bow, in whose delight
			I am content to live, whose spells of might
			Are smiles that gleam, are tears that glisten cold
			On the fair cheek that blushes if I praise;
			Are warm ripe kisses in the softer hours
			When love is perfect blossom of sweet flowers,
			Are shadowed glances of pure lovelight rays
			From clear blue eyes, are wonderful caresses
			When love is golden autumn of sweet fruit.
			What other worship can usurp my days
			When I may lie amid her sunny tresses
			Enraptured by the music of her lute
			One long calm love, one heart's delight always?
			
			2
			
			Bright spheres of heaven, firefly gleams, fair ghosts
			Laugh lightly to the silver globe of night
			That glitters on green fields, and on the sea
			Ripples break foamless, where the golden coasts
			Echo their mellow cadence. Such delight
			Is on me I would fain sigh into sleep [35]
			Until my love comes forth to dream with me
			Of silent words of love and peopled stars
			Where we may live and love and never weep
			Nor yet be weary. The last ruby bars
			Are sunk beneath the sea. The shadows creep
			More on me as I quicken with desire
			My love is all of gold, my faith is deep
			Lit with my heart's imperishable fire.
			
			3
			
			Pale spectres of the stars, corpse-lights, bad-ghosts
			Sicken the icy glamour of the moon
			Upon the vacant earth; and where the sea
			Marshals sepulchral billows, obscene hosts
			Of harpies gibber weirdly. I should swoon
			For the silence, rolled not some dread minstrelsy
			In fearful anguish on the shuddering air,
			Breathing out terror and lightning to the night
			That widly echoes back Hell's venomous spite,
			And shrieks aloud the watchword of despair
			To draw each painracked nerve more tense and gray
			For I am alone, unloved, in murk and gloom,
			Unloved, unfriended, fittest for the tomb,
			Who worshipped golden feet and found them clay.
			[36]
			
			
			4
			
			She creeps alive upon the tawny sands,
			False glittering woman, girt about with lies!
			She steals toward me, the tigress sleek and fierce!
			Destroying devil, with long sinuous hands
			And hate triumphant in blue-murderous eyes!
			I nerve myself to spring upon and pierce
			With maddening fangs those firm white bosom towers,
			To tear those lithe voluptuous limbs apart
			And glut my ravening soul with vengeance. Heart
			Quickens as she draws near; the scent of flowers
			Breathes round her damned presence. Shall she live
			To triumph with those tainted lips of song --
			She whispered 'Dearest, I have kept thee long'.
			I flung myself before her, 'Love, forgive!' [37]
			
			
			
			BALLADE DE LA JOLIE MARION
			
			It is a sweet thing to be loved,
			Although my sighs in absence wake,
			Although my saddening heart is moved,
			I smile and bear for love's dear sake.
			My songs their wonted music make,
			Joyous and careless, songs of youth,
			Because the sacred lips of both
			Are met to kiss the last good-bye,
			Because sweet glances weep for ruth
			That we must part, and love must die.
			
			Remembrance of love's long delights
			Is to remember sighs and tears,
			Yet I will think upon the nights
			I whispered into passionate ears
			The fond desires, the sweet faint fears.
			My lover's limbs of lissome white
			Gleamed in the darkness and strange light,
			The wondrous orbs voluptuously
			Bent on me all unearthly bright:
			But we must part, and love must die.
			
			Fond limbs with mine were intertwined, [38]
			A hand lascivious fondled me;
			My ears grew deaf, my eyes grew blind,
			My tongue was hot from kisses free,
			Short madness, and we lazily
			Lolled back upon the bed of fire.
			I was a-weary -- her desire
			Drew her upon me -- Marion, fie!
			You work our pleasure till I tire:
			But we must part, and love must die.
			
			Nor thus did love's embraces wane,
			Though lusty limbs grow idle quite;
			Our mouths' red valves are over-fain
			To suck the sweetnest from the night;
			And amorously, with touches light,
			Steal passion from reluctant pain.
			So has the daystar fled again
			Before the blushes of the sky,
			So did I clasp thy knees in vain:
			For we must part, and love must die.
			
			You say another's sensuous lips
			Shall open to my kisses there:
			When weary, steal those luscious sips;
			Another's hands play in my hair
			And find delight for me to bare [39]
			The bosom, and the passionate mound
			White and, for Venus' temple, round,
			A garden of wild thyme whose eye
			My sword shall piece, and never wound:
			For we must part, and love must die.
			
			You say -- but Oh! my Marion's kiss
			Shall linger on my palate still,
			No joy on earth is like to this
			That we have tasted to our fill
			Of all our sweet lascivious will.
			The cup is drained of lust's delight,
			Yet wells with pleasure, and by night
			I'll come once more and loving lie
			Between thine amorous limbs, despite
			That we must part and love must die.
			
			ENVOI
			Thus, sweet, I'll sing when day doth break
			And weary lovers must awake
			To part, but now our pleasure take
			In one last bout of rivalry,
			Whose passions first shall answer make
			To the dances that the curtains shake
			Till we must part and love must die. [40]
			
			
			AT STOCKHOLM
			
			We could not speak, although the sudden glow
			Of passion mantling to the crimson cheek
			Of either, told our tale of love, although
			We could not speak.
			
			What need of language, barren and false and bleak,
			While our white arms could link each other so,
			And fond red lips their partners mutely seek?
			
			What time for language, when our kisses flow
			Eloquent, warm, as words are cold and weak? --
			Or now -- Ah! sweetheart, even were it so
			We could not speak! [41]
			
			
			MATHILDE
			
			O large lips opening outward like a flower
			To breathe upon my face that clings to thee!
			O wanton breasts that heave deliciously
			And tempt my eager teeth! Oh cruel power
			Of wide deep thighs that make me furious
			As they enclasp me and swing to and fro
			With passion that grows pale and drives the flow
			Of the fast fragrant blood of both of us
			Into the awful link that knits us close
			With chain electric! O have mercy yet
			In drawing out my life in this desire
			To consummate this moment all the gross
			Lusts of to-night, and pay the sudden dept
			That with strong water shall put out our fire! [42]
			
			
			YET TIME TO TURN
			
			Brighter than snow on glittering Alps, the soul
			Of my lost love was, bluer than the haze
			Of those same hills, more violent and deep
			Her eyes' clear gaze,
			Dreaming of hidden wonders; and the goal
			Of life grew luminous o'er Time's empurpled steep.
			
			She loved me then; she loves me now, afar.
			Ah, she knew not! and I, so steeped and stained
			With fierce sins, knew myself unworthy of
			The heart I gained,
			And, a lost mariner whose polar star
			He is ashamed to look to, cast away her love.
			
			I would not have her love a thing so vile,
			I would not link her life with such as mine!
			O cursed sin, to leave my soul too high
			To cheat the shrine!
			I drave Love forth, Love lingered yet awhile
			So that I might not quite win Hell before I die.
			
			O little root of nobleness left thus
			Dead since it has no power to grow, to bloom; [43]
			Live, since I may not bury it within
			The gaping tomb
			Where virtue lies, that I, imperious,
			Long since interred with hope, and all life's joy save
			sin.
			[44]
			
			
			ALL NIGHT
			
			All night no change, no whisper. Scarce a breath
			But lips closed hard upon the cup of death
			To drain its sweetest poison. Scarce a sigh
			Beats the dead hours out; scarce a melody
			Of measured pulses quickened with the blood
			Of that desire which pours its deadly flood
			Through soul and shaken body; scarce a thought
			But sense through spirit most divinely wrought
			To perfect feeling; only through the lips
			Electric ardour kindles, flashes, slips
			Through all the circle to her lips again
			And thence, unwavering, flies to mine, to drain
			All pleasure in one draught. No whispered sigh,
			No change of breast, love's posture perfectly
			Once gained, we change no more. The fever grows
			Hotter or cooler, as the night wind blows
			Fresh gusts of passion on the outer gate.
			But we, in waves of frenzy, concentrate
			Our thirsty mouths on that hot drinking cup
			Whence we may never suck the nectar up
			Too often or too hard; fresh fire invades
			Our furious veins, and the unquiet shades
			Of night make noises in the darkened room. [45]
			Yet, did I raise my head, throughout the gloom
			I might behold thine eyes as red as fire,
			A tigress maddened with supreme desire.
			White arms that clasp me, fervent breast that glides
			An eager snake, about my breast and sides,
			And white teeth keen to bite, red tongue that tires,
			And lips ensanguine with unfed desires,
			Hot breath and hands, dishevelled hair and head,
			Thy fevered mouth like snakes' mouths crimson red,
			A very beast of prey; and I like thee,
			Fiery, unweary, as thou art of me.
			But raise no head; I know thee, breast and thigh,
			Lips, hair and eyes and mouth: I will not die
			But thou come with me o'er the gate of death.
			So, blood and body furious with breath
			That pants through foaming kisses, let us stay
			Gripped hard together to keep life away,
			Mouths drowned in murder, never satiate,
			Kissing away the hard decrees of Fate,
			Kissing insatiable in mad desire
			Kisses whose agony may never tire,
			Kissing the gates of hell, the sword of God,
			Each unto each a serpent or a rod,
			A well of wine and fire, each unto each,
			Whose lips are fain convulsively to reach
			A higher heaven, a deeper hell. Ah! day [46]
			So soon to dawn, delight to snatch away!
			Damned day, whose sunlight finds us as with wine
			Drunken, with lust made manifest divine
			Devils of darkness, servants unto hell--
			Yea, king and queen of Sheol, terrible
			Above all fiends and furies, hating more
			The high Jehovah, loving Baal Peor,
			Our father and our lover and our god!
			Yea, though he lift his adamantine rod
			And pierce us through, how shall his anger tame
			Fire that glows fiercer for the brand of shame
			Thrust in it; so, we who are all of fire,
			One dull red flare of devilish desire,
			The God of Israel shall not quench with tears,
			Nor blood of martyrs drawn from myriad spheres,
			Nor watery blood of Christ; that blood shall boil
			With all the fury of our hellish toil;
			His veins shall dry with heat; his bones shall bleach
			Cold and detested, picked of dogs, on each
			Dry seperate dunghill of burnt Golgotha.
			But we will wrest from heaven a little star,
			The Star of Bethlehem, a lying light
			Fit for our candle, and by devils' might
			Fix in the vast concave of hell for us
			To lume its ghastly shadows murderous,
			That in the mirror of the lake of fire [47]
			We may behold the image of Desire
			Stretching broad wings upon us, and may leap
			Each upon other, till our bodies weep
			Thick sweet salt tears, and, clasping as of yore
			Within dull limits of Earth's barren shore,
			Fulfil immense desires of strange new shames,
			Burn into one another as the flames
			Of our hell fuse us into one wild soul:
			Then, one immaculate divinest whole,
			Plunge, fire, within all fire, dive far to death;
			Till, like king Satan's sympathetic breath,
			Burn on us as a voice from far above
			Strange nameless elements of fire and love;
			And we, one mouth to kiss, one soul to lure,
			For ever, wedded, one, divine, endure
			Far from sun, sea, and spring from love or light,
			Imbedded in impenetrable night;
			Deeper than ocean, higher than the sky,
			Vaster than petty loves that dream and die,
			Insatiate, angry, terrible for lust,
			Who shrivel God to adamantine dust
			By our fierce gaze upon him, who would strive
			Under our wrath, to flee away, to dive
			Into the deep recesses of his heaven.
			But we, one joy, one love, one shame for leaven,
			Quit hope and life, quit fear and death and love, [48]
			Implacable as God, desired above
			All loves of hell or heaven, supremely wed,
			Knit in one soul in one delicious bed
			More hot than hell, more wicked than all things,
			Vast in our sin, whose unredeeming wings
			Rise o'er the world, and flap for lust of death,
			Eager as anyone that travaileth;
			So in our lusts, the monstrous burden borne
			Heavy within the womb, we wait the morn
			Of its fulfilment. Thus eternity
			Wheels vain wings round us, who may never die,
			But cling as hard as serpent's wedlock is,
			One writhing glory, an immortal kiss. [49]
			
			
			
			ODE TO VENUS CALLIPGYE
			
			Where was light when thy body came
			Out of the womb of a perished prayer?
			Where was life when the sultry air,
			Hot with the lust of night and shame,
			Brooded on dust, when thy shoulders bare
			Shone on the sea with a sudden flame
			Into all Time to abundant fame?
			
			CHORUS
			
			Daughter of Lust by the foam of the sea!
			Mother of flame! Sister of shame!
			Tiger that Sin nor her son cannot tame!
			Worship to thee! Glory to thee!
			Venus Callipyge, mother of me.
			
			Fruitless foam of a sterile sea,
			Wanton waves of a vain desire,
			Maddening billows flecked with fire,
			Storms that lash on the brine, and flee,
			Dead delights, insatiate ire
			Broke like a flower to the birth of thee,
			Venus Callipgye, mother of me! [50]
			
			Deep wet eyes that are violet-blue!
			Haggard cheeks that may blush no more!
			Body bruised daintily, touched of gore
			Where the sharp fierce teeth have bitten through
			The olive skin that thy sons adore,
			That they die for daily, are slain anew
			By manifold hate; for their tale is few.
			
			Few are thy sons, but as fierce as dawn,
			Rapturous moments and weary days,
			Nights when thine image a thousand ways
			Is smitten and kissed on the fiery lawn
			Where the wash of the waves of thy native bays
			Laps weary limbs, that of thee have drawn
			Laughter and fire for their souls in pawn.
			
			O thy strong sons! they are dark as night,
			Cruel and barren and false as the sea,
			They have cherished Hell for the love of thee,
			Filled with thy lust and abundant might,
			Filled with the phantom desire to free
			Body and soul from the sound and sight
			Of a world and a God that doth not right.
			
			O thy dark daughter! their breasts are slack,
			Their lips so large and as poppies red; [51]
			They lie in a furious barren bed;
			They lie on their faces, their eyelids lack
			Tears, and their cheeks are as roses dead;
			White are their throats, but upon the back
			Red blood is clotted in gouts of black.
			
			All on their sides are the wounds of lust,
			Down, from the home of their auburn hair
			Down to the feet that we find so fair;
			Where the red sword has a secret thrust
			Pain, and delight, and desire they share.
			Verily, pain! and thy daughters trust
			Thou canst bid roses spring out of dust.
			
			Mingle, ye children of such a queen,
			Mingle, and meet, and sow never a seed!
			Mingle, and tingle, and kiss and bleed
			With the blood of the life of the Lampsacene,
			With the teeth that know never a pitiful deed
			But fret and foam over with kisses obscene--
			Mingle and weep for what years have been.
			
			Never a son nor a daughter grow
			From your waste limbs, lest the goddess weep;
			Fill up the ranks from the babes that sleep
			Far in the arms of a god of snow. [52]
			Conquer the world, that her throne may keep
			More of its pride, and its secret woe
			Flow through all earth as the rivers flow.
			
			Which of the gods is like thee, our queen?
			Venus Callipyge, nameless, nude, 
			Thou with the knowledge of all indued
			Secrets of life and the dreams that mean
			Loves that are not, as are mortals', hued
			All rose and lily, but linger unseen
			Passion-flowers purpled, garlands of green!
			
			Who like thyself shall command our ways?
			Who has such pleasures and pains for hire?
			Who can awake such a mortal fire
			In the veins of a man, that deathly days
			Have robbed of the masteries of desire? 
			Who can give garlands of fadeless bays
			Unto the sorrow and pain we praise?
			
			Yea,we must praise, though the deadly shade
			Fall on the morrow, though fires of hell
			Harrow our vitals; a miracle
			Springs at thy kisses, for thou hast made
			Anguish and sorrow desirable
			Torment of hell as the leaves that fade
			Quickly forgotten, despised, decayed. [53]
			
			They are decayed, but thou springest again,
			Mother of mystery, barren, who bearest
			Flowers of most comeliest children, who wearest
			Wounds for delight, whose desire shall stain
			Star-space with blood as the price thou sharest
			With thy red lovers, whose passing pain
			Ripens to marvellous after-gain.
			
			Thou art the fair, the wise, the divine,
			Thou art our mother, our goddess, our life,
			Thou art our passion, our sorrow, our strife,
			Thou, on whose forehead no lights ever shine,
			Thou, our Redeemer, our mistress, our wife,
			Thou, barren sister of deathlier brine,
			Venus Callipyge, mother of mine!
			
			CHORUS
			
			Daughter of Lust by the foam of the sea!
			Mother of flame! Sister of shame!
			Tiger the Sin nor her son cannot tame!
			Worship to thee! Glory to thee!
			Venus Callipyge, mother of me. [54]
			
			
			
			VOLUPTE
			
			Clitoridette, m'amourette,
			Ote ta jolie robe d'or,
			Tes roses bas, chemise nette,
			Et decouvre pour moi le con,
			Le con que j'aime, aux cheveux noirs,
			Le cul ou tu m'admets ce soir, 
			Les seins je baise, que j'adore, 
			Tous les secrets de ton boudoir.
			
			'Viens a moi, qui, raide, couche,
			Attendant tes desirs lubriques;
			Tu suces et couvres dans la bouche 
			De l'amour le pouce phallique;
			Je tremble, en mourant avec feu,
			Voyant la clarte de tes yeux,
			Leur flamme mechante, saphique,
			Brulant en langueur amoureux.
			
			Laisse mon epee affaiblie,
			Donne a mes baisere la vagine
			D'ou je suc'rai de l'eau-de-lys,
			Et te ferai comme divine.
			La langue qui cherche tes reins, [55]
			Les genoux qui pressent tes seins,
			Te feraient deesse, ma mine,
			Je mordrai, et tu cries en vain.
			
			Alors, de nouvelle energie,
			Je jette entre tes jolies cuisses,
			Dedans ton cul, ce fleur-de-lys,
			Long, gros, et ardent. Ca, il glisse
			En haut, en bas. La passion croit
			Fievreux, furieux, pour toi!
			Vient, la crise du delice!....
			Ah, je suis mort!.... Embrasse-moi!! [56]
			
			
			
			RONDELS
			
			I
			
			Maid of dark eyes, that glow with shy sweet fire,
			Song lingers on thy beauty till it dies
			In awe and longing on the smitten lyre:
			Maid of dark eyes.
			Grant me thy love, earth's last surpassing prize,
			Me, cast upon the faggots of love's pyre
			For love of the white bosom that underlies
			
			The subtle passion of thy snowy attire,
			The shadowy secret of thine amorous thighs,
			The inmost shrine of my supreme desire,
			Maid of dark eyes!
			
			2
			
			Boy of red lips, pale face, and golden hair,
			Of dreamy eyes of love, and finger-tips
			Rosy with youth, too fervid and too fair,
			
			Boy of red lips.
			
			How the fond ruby rapier glides and slips
			'Twixt the white hills thou spreadest for me there;
			How my red mouth immortal honey sips [57]
			From thy ripe kisses, and sucks nectar rare
			When each the shrine of God Priapus clips
			In hot mouth passionate more than man may bear,
			Boy of red lips!
			
			
			AD LUCIUM
			
			The Lampsacene is girt with golden dress;
			His courts gleam ever with forbidden light;
			I only bring no gift to him to-night,
			Being the mockery of his rod's distress.
			While satyrs woo, and fauns, and nymphs give ear,
			I burn unslacked, mu Lucius is unkind,
			He dare not guess, I dare not speak my mind,
			Nor feed upon his lips, nor call him dear,
			Nor may I clasp him, lissome and divine,
			Nor suck our passion from his eager verge,
			Nor pleasure in his quick embraces prove;
			I faint for love, come aid me sparkling wine,
			That my unquenchable desire may urge
			In Lucius' fiery heart responsive love.
			
			O fervent and sweet to my bosom
			Past woman, I'll clasp thee and cling
			Till the buds of desire break to blossom
			And my kisses surprise thee and sting;
			Till my hand and my mouth are united
			In caresses that shake thee and smite,
			While the stars hide their lustre affrighted
			In measureless night. [59]
			
			I will neither delay nor dissemble
			But utter my love in thine ear
			Though my voice and my countenance tremble
			With a passion past pity and fear;
			I will speak from my heart till thou listen
			With the soft sound of wings of a dove,
			Till thine eyes anser back till they glisten
			O Lucius, love!
			
			I will touch thee but once with a finger,
			But thy vitals shall shudder and smart,
			And the smile through thy sorrow shall linger,
			And the touch shall pierce through to thine heart;
			Thy lips a denial shall fashion,
			Thou shalt tremble and fear to confess,
			Till thou suddenly break into passion
			With yes, love, and yes.
			
			I will kiss thee and fondle and woo thee
			And mingle my lips into thine
			That shall tingle and thrill through and through thee
			As the draught of the flame of a wine;
			I will drink of the fount of our pleasure
			Licking round and about and above
			Till its streams pour me out their full measure,
			O Lucius, love! [60]
			
			Thou shalt clasp me and clamber above me
			And press me with eager desire,
			Thou shalt kiss me and clip me and love me
			With a love beyond infinite fire,
			Thou shalt pierce to the portals of passion
			And satiate thy longing and lust
			In the fearless Athenian fashion,
			A rose amid dust.
			
			We will taste all delights and caresses
			And know all the secrets of joy,
			From the love-look that chastity blesses
			To the lusts that deceive and destroy;
			We will live in the light of sweet glances,
			By day and by night we will move
			To the music of manifold dances,
			O Lucius, love! [61]
			
			
			
			A PAEAN IN THE SPRINGTIDE
			
			Now is the triumph of Love, now is the day of his guerdon,
			Now when the blossoms are full on the bountiful delicate spray;
			Now has the year sprung aloft and shaken the frost and its
			burden,
			April is come with his showers, sun laughs and promises May.
			Newly the bird sings of Love, newly he wooeth a maiden,
			Newly the heart of a boy leaps, and his eyes catch its fire.
			Light is his laugh as the sea, with no sad remembrances laden;
			Light as the sea, and as fierce and fickle is grown his desire.
			Here in the spring we are free, as the winds that look love at
			the ocean;
			Change we and weary too soon of delight that is hardly begun;
			Pleasure and pain are made one, a delirious noble emotion;
			Love dies before he grows manly, dawn never yields to the sun.
			
			Love in a night shall live and die,
			Love in a day shall wing and fly;
			Love in the Spring shall last an hour,
			Easily fades a spring-tide flower.
			
			Where are the blooms of frost, hoary and bright and vestal;
			Virginal lips not kissed, flowers unbidden to bud?
			Ah! we have slain their beams, as our low heads lazily nestle,
			Where the dark home of Love is, where the impatient blood [62]
			Spurts at the furious kiss, darts far forth as an adder,
			Stinging and biting amain, as the night becomes golden with fire.
			Dawn brings reason back, and the violet eyes grow sadder,
			Eyes that were red in the dark, eyes of enfevered desire.
			Eyes that wrote songs with a glance, whose look sang the
			sweetest of stories,
			Sweeter than lips could have told, who loved better only to kiss;
			Sweeter than hands could have written, who took delight in
			the glories
			Fierce of a triple embrace, a fadeless implacable bliss.
			
			Love is a sword whose blade is red,
			Love is a deed whose fruit is dead;
			Love is a tiger, fierce of power,
			Easily fades a spring-tide flower.
			
			Death shall come slow and soft, with the stealthy tread of a
			leopard;
			While the few stars have grown dim, as he seeks for an
			innocent prey.
			Death shall pounce soon on the fold, where Love was a treacher-
			ous shepherd;
			So with hot lips shall he come, ere the mountains are silver
			and grey.
			Life shall gasp out in the gloom, and all our desires shall
			perish;
			Hope and its roseate crown shall fall in the dark to the dust.
			Love and his garland shall go, with the last of the joys we may
			cherish, [63]
			Death with cold finger shall touch the delicate springs of our
			lust.
			We shall be weary of kisses, weary of all the caresses
			Man or his sisters of shame dream or devise or obtain;
			Cover the white limbs ashamed with the fiery impassionate
			tresses,
			Once for a bed to delight, now for a covering to pain.
			
			Love is a fruit with rotted core,
			Love is a thing shall be no more;
			Love is a bride of a bitter dower,
			Easily fades a spring-tide flower.
			
			Where shall be Hylas then? for his lonely lips are sighing,
			Vainly in hell for love, vainly for days gone by;
			Where the incarnate flame of Lesbian lovers dying,
			Then where the world is past, and Heaven or hell draw nigh?
			Heaven with cold and loveless lips, though his fruits be many,
			Hell with his red mouth hot, barren although he be.
			Hylas and Sappho choose, and are never denied of any,
			Hell's most insatiate fangs, death and his empery.
			Heaven is bare and bleak, hell has the joys beyond Heaven,
			Fire and desire and delight, of a love that is always young;
			Hell has the pains of hell, but the sweetest of lusts for leaven.
			Fierce body, breasts of delight, fearful and murderous tongue.
			
			Hell is the house of all delight,
			Heaven the home of a bitter blight; [64]
			Pain is our joy and our spirits' power,
			Never shall fade its fiery flower.
			
			Now is the triumph of Love, gazing far to an infinite pleasure,
			Pleasure that mocks Heaven's hopes, that our hands are im-
			patient to hold.
			Love and delight pouring out, in a fearless insatiate measure,
			Out of the chalice of lust, scarlet o'errunning its gold.
			This is the song of the Spring,that the nightingales carol by
			starlight,
			This the delight of our eyes, as they shine with strange fire in
			the night,
			This is our trust and our joy -beyond death we look on to the
			far light
			Flaming from hell our last home, this is the key of our might.
			Come, fiery birds of a clime we know not, and sing us your
			paean;
			Triumph of gods that are known secretly, not by a name,
			Gods whose implacable feet have trampled the god Galilean,
			Cast though they be into hell, given to death and to shame.
			
			Heaven and hell has striven in war,
			Sappho and Hylas, with Christ and Jah;
			We are of those, though they lose their power,
			Never shall fade their fiery flower. [65]
			
			
			
			TO J. L. D.
			
			At last, so long desired, so long delayed,
			The step is taken, and the threshold past;
			I am within the palace I have prayed
			At last.
			
			Like scudding winds, when skies are overcast,
			Came the soft breath of Love, that might not fade.
			O Love, whose magic whispers bind me fast,
			
			O Love, who hast the kiss of Love betrayed,
			Hide my poor blush beneath thy pinions vast,
			Since thou hast come, nor left me more a maid,
			At last. [66]
			
			
			A BALLAD
			OF PASSIVE PAEDERASTY
			
			Of man's delight and man's desire
			In one thing is no weariness--
			To feel the fury of the fire,
			And writhe within the close caress
			Of fierce embrace, and wanton kiss,
			And final nuptial done aright,
			How sweet a passion, shame, is this,
			A strong man's love is my delight!
			
			Free women cast a lustful eye
			On my gigantic charms, and seek
			By word and touch with me to lie,
			And vainly proffer cunt and cheek;
			Then, angry, they miscall me weak,
			Till one, divining me aright,
			Points to her buttocks, whispers 'Greek!"--
			A strong man's love is my delight! [67]
			
			Boys tempt my lips to wanton use,
			And show their tongues, and smile awry,
			And wonder why I should refuse
			To feel their buttocks on the sly,
			And kiss their genitals, and cry:
			'Ah! Ganymede, grant me one night!'
			This is the one sweet mystery:
			A strong man's love is my delight!
			
			To feel him clamber on me, laid
			Prone on the couch of lust and shame,
			To feel him force me like a maid
			And his great sword within me flame,
			His breath as hot and quick as fame;
			To kiss him and to clasp him tight;
			This is my joy without a name,
			A strong man's love is my delight.
			
			To feel again his love grow grand
			Touched by the langour of my kiss;
			To suck the hot blood from my gland
			Mingled with fierce spunk that doth hiss,
			And boils in sudden spurted bliss;
			Ah! God! the long-drawn lusty fight!
			Grant me eternity of this!
			A strong man's love is my delight! [68]
			
			
			ENVOI
			
			Husband, come early to my bed,
			And stay beyond the dawn of light
			In mighty deeds of lustihead.
			A strong man's love is my delight! [69]
			
			
			
			TO A.D.
			
			Across the sea that lies between us twain
			I gaze and see thee, exiled but as free
			As winds that lash the billows of the main
			Across the sea.
			
			I remain here in somber slavery
			Amid these winter gusts of bitter pain,
			And sorrow for thy lips in vain, in vain,
			Bound by the world's inexorable chain,
			And parted from thee. Spirit of Liberty,
			
			Bear thou my kisses' sunshine, my tears' rain
			To him I love, who may one day love me,
			And bid him gladden at my amorous strain
			Across the sea. [70]
			
			
			
			
			AT KIEL
			
			Oh, the white flame of limbs in dusky air,
			The furnace of thy great grey eyes on me
			Turned till I shudder. Darkness on the sea,
			And wan ghost-lights are flickering everywhere
			So that the world is ghastly. But within
			Where we two cling together, and hot kisses
			Stray to and fro amid the wildernesses
			Of swart curled locks! I deem it a sweet sin,
			So sweet that fires of hell have no more power
			On body and soul to quench the lustrous flame
			Of that desire that burns between us twain.
			What is Eternity, seeing we hold this hour
			For all the lusts and luxuries of shame?
			Heaven is well lost for this surpassing gain. [71]
			
			
			
			
			SUGGESTED ADDITIONAL STANZAS FOR
			'A BALLAD OF BURDENS'
			
			The burden of caught clap. How sore it is!
			A burden of sad shameful suffering,
			The bitter bastard of a bloody kiss,
			The Parthian arrow poisoned from Love's sling!
			Lo, sweet Lord Christ, thou knowest how sore a thing
			Is a cock crooked and consumed of fire
			Shooting out venomous sap that hath a sting!
			This is the end of every man's desire.
			
			The burden of bought boys. Behold, dear Lord,
			How plump their buttocks be, lift up Thine eyes,
			See how their cocks stand at an amorous word,
			How their lips suck out life until love dies,
			See, Lord, Thou knowest, how wearily one lies
			Cursing the lusts that fail, the deeds that tire;
			Shrunk is San Cresce to a sorry size.
			This is the end of every man's desire. [72]
			
			
			'GO INTO THE HIGHWAYS AND HEDGES,
			AND COMPEL THEM TO COME IN'
			
			Let my fond lips but drink thy golden wine,
			My bright-eyed Arab, only let me eat
			The rich brown globes of sacramental meat
			Steaming and firm, hot from their home divine,
			And let me linger with thy hands in mine,
			And lick the sweat from dainty dirty feet
			Fresh with the losse aroma of the street,
			And then anon I'll glue my mouth to thine.
			
			This is the height of joy, to lie and feel
			Thy spiced spittle trickle down my throat;
			This is more pleasant than at dawn to steal
			Toward lawns and sunny brooklets, and to gloat
			Over earth's peace, and hear in ether float
			Songs of soft spirits into rapture peal. [73]
			
			
			
			THE BLOOD-LOTUS
			
			The ashen sky, too sick for sleep, makes my face grey; my
			senses swoon;
			Here, in the glamour of the moon, will not some pitying
			godhead weep
			
			For cold grey anguish of her eyes, that look to God, and look
			in vain,
			For death, the anodyne of pain, for sleep, earth's trivial
			paradise?
			
			Sleep I forget. Her silky breath no longer fans my ears; I dream
			I float on some forgotten stream that hath a saviour still of
			death,
			
			A sweet warm smell of hidden flowers whose heavy petals
			kiss the sun,
			Fierce tropic poisons every one that fume and sweat through
			forest hours;
			
			They grow in darkness, heat beguiles their sluggish kisses, in
			the wood
			They breathe no murmur that is good, and Satan in their
			blossom smiles.
			
			They murder with the old perfume that maddens all men's
			blood; we die [74]
			Fresh from some corpse-clothed memory, some secret
			redolence of gloom,
			
			Some darkling murmurous song of lust quite strange to man
			and beast and bird,
			Silent in power, not overheard by any snake that eats the dust:
			
			No crimson-hooded viper knows, no silver-crested asp has
			guessed
			The strange soft secrets of my breast; no leprous cobra shall
			disclose
			
			The many-seated, multiform, divine, essential joys that these
			Dank odours bring, that starry seas wash white in vain;
			intense and warm
			
			The scents fulfil, they permeate all lips, all arteries, and fire
			New murmured music on the lyre that throbs the horrors they
			create.
			
			Omniscient blossom! Is thy red slack bosom fresher for my kiss?
			Are thy loves sharper? Hast thou bliss in all the sorrows of the
			dead?
			
			Why art thou paler when the moon grows loftier in the
			troublous sky? [75]
			Why dost thou beat and heave when I press lips of fire, hell's
			princeliest boon,
			
			To thy mad petals, green and gold like angels' wings, when as
			a flood
			God's essence fills them, and the blood throughout their web
			grows icy cold?
			
			To thy red centre are my eyes held fast and fervent, as at night
			Some sad miasma lends a light of strange and silent blasphemies
			
			To lure a soul to hell, to draw some saint's charred lust, to
			tempt, to win
			Another sacrifice to sin, another poet's heart to gnaw
			
			With dubious remorse. Oh! flame of torturing flower-love!
			sacrament
			Of Satan, triple element of mystery and love and shame,
			
			Green, gold, and crimson, in my heart you strive with Jesus for
			its realm,
			While Sorrow's tears would overwhelm the warriors of either
			part!
			
			Jesus would lure me: from his side the gleaming torrent of
			the spear [76]
			Withdraws, my soul with joy and fear waits for sweet blood
			to pour its tide
			
			Of warm delight--in vain! so cold, so watery, so slack it flows,
			It leaves me moveless as a rose, albeit her flakes are manifold.
			
			He hath no scent to drive men mad; no mystic fragrance from
			his skin
			Sheds a loose hint of subtle sin such as the queen Faustina had.
			
			Thou drawest me. Thy golden lips are carven Cleopatra-wise
			Large, full, and moist, within them lies the silver rampart,
			whence there slips
			
			That rosy flame of love, the fount of blood at my light
			bidding spilt;
			And my desires, if aught thou wilt, are with thy mind, and
			thy account
			
			With God shall bear my name the more; give me the know-
			ledge, me the power
			For some new sin one little hour, and bankrupt God the
			creditor:
			
			Steal from his stock of suffering; his tender mercies rob at
			will;
			Destroy his graciousness, until he must avenge the name of king.
			[77]
			
			Strange fascinations whirl and wind about my spirit lying coils;
			Thy charm enticeth, for the spoils of victory, all an evil mind.
			
			Thy perfume doth confound my thought, new longings echo,
			and I crave
			Doubtful liaisons with the grave and loves of Parthia for sport,
			
			I think perhaps no longer yet, but dream and lust for stranger
			things
			Than ever sucked the lips of kings, or fed the tears of Mahomet.
			
			Quaint carven vampire bats, unseen in curious hollows of the
			trees,
			Or deadlier serpents coiled at eased round carcases of birds
			unclean.
			
			All wandering changeful spectre shapes that dance in slow
			sweet measure round
			And merge themselves in the profound, nude women and
			distorted apes
			
			Grotesque and hairy, in their rage more rampant than the
			stallion steed;
			There is no help; their horrid need on these pale women they
			assuage. [78]
			
			Wan breasts too pendulous, thin hands waving so aimlessly,
			they breathe
			Faint sickly kisses, and inweave my head in quite burial-bands.
			
			The silent troops recede; within the fiery circle of their glance
			Warm writhing woman-horses dance a shameless Bacchanal
			of sin;
			
			Foam whips their reeking lips, and still the flower-witch
			nestless to my lips,
			Twines her swart lissome legs and hips, half serpent and half
			devil, till
			
			My whole life seems to lie in her; her kisses draw my breath;
			my face
			Loses its lustre in the grace of her quick bosom; sinister
			
			The raving spectres reel; I see beyond my Circe's eyes no shape
			Save vague cloud-measures that escape the dances whirling
			witchery.
			
			Their song is in my ears, that burn with their melodious
			wickedness;
			But in her heart my sorceress has songs more sinful, that I learn
			
			As she sings slowly all their shame, and makes me tingle with
			delight [79]
			At new debaucheries, whose might rekindles blood and bone
			to flame.
			
			The circle gathers. Negresses howl in the naked dance, and
			wheel
			On poniard-blades of poisoned steel, and weep out blood in
			agonies;
			
			Strange beast and reptile writhe; the song grows high and
			melancholy now;
			The perfume savours every brow with lust unutterable of wrong;
			
			Clothed with my flower-bride I sit, a harlot in a harlot's dress,
			And laugh with careless wickedness that strews the broad road
			of the Pit
			
			With vine and myrtle and thy flower, my harlot-maiden,
			who for man
			Now first forsakest thy leman, thy Eve, my Lilith, in this bower
			
			Which we indwell, a deathless three, changeless and changing,
			as the pyre
			Of earthly love becomes a fire to heat us through eternity.
			
			I have forgotten Christ at last; he may look back, grown
			amorous, [80]
			And call across the gulf to us, and signal kisses through the
			vast;
			
			We shall disdain, clasp vaster yet, and mock his newer pangs,
			and call
			With stars and voices musical, jeers his touched heart shall
			not forget.
			
			I would have pitied him. This flower spits blood upon him,
			so must I
			Cast ashes through the misty sky to mock his faded crown of
			power,
			
			And with our laughter's nails refix his torn flesh faster to the
			wood,
			And with more cruel zest make good the shackles of the
			Crucifix.
			
			So be it, in thy arms I rest, lulled into silence by the strain
			Of sweet love-whispers, while I drain damnation from thy
			tawny breast.
			
			Nor heed the haggards sun's eclipse, feeling thy perfume
			fill my hair,
			And all thy dark caresses wear sin's raiment on thy melting
			lips--
			
			Nay, by the witchcraft of thy charms to sleep, nor drain that
			God survive; [81]
			To wake, this only to contrive -- fresh passions in thy naked
			arms;
			
			And, at that moment when thy breath mixes with mine, like
			wine, to call
			Each memory, one merged into all, to kiss, to sleep, to mate
			with death! [82]
			
			
			
			TO MY FIRST-BORN
			
			At last a father! In Mathilde's womb
			The poison quickens, and the tare-seeds shoot;
			On my old upas-tree a bastard fruit
			Is grafted. One more generation's doom
			Fixes its fangs. Crime's flame, disease's gloom,
			Are thy birth-dower. Another prostitute
			Predestined, born man, damned to grow a brute!
			Another travels tainted to the tomb!
			
			My sin, my madness, in thy blood are set,
			A vile imperishable coronet,
			To hound thee into hell! God spits at thee
			The curse thy parents earned. Revenge be thine!
			Kiss Lust, kill Truth, and worship at Sin's shrine.
			And foul His face with dung -- thy infamy! [83]
			
			
			
			CHANT AU SAINT-ESPRIT
			
			Bah! gros bougre du ciel!
			Tu ne te plais pas seulement
			Des chansons de Gabriel,
			
			Ni non plus du sacrament
			Tres' banal, ni des anthemes;
			Mais l'horrible hurlement
			
			De mes curieux blasphemes
			Te plaira, je parierai!
			Jesus dit ces anathemes:
			
			'Vous ces choses qui direz,
			'Blasphemant le Saint-Esprit,
			'N'aurez pardon pour jamais!'
			
			Neanmoins, Jesus, je dis!
			Saint-Esprit, je crois a toi,
			Suceur du callibistris
			
			Du bon Dieu, ta douce loi
			Moi je garderai toujours!
			Salut, bon et puissant roi! [84]
			
			Je veux gouter tes amours,
			Avoir ta belle Marie,
			En la jouant les trois tours;
			
			Derriere, et ventre aussi,
			Et la belle bouche, apres,
			Quand je serai ramolli,
			
			Ni la semer de bon ble,
			Mais la sucer, si l'on ose
			Apres toi; je n'aimerais
			
			Comme toi, en plein nevrose,
			Si je devine tes gouts,
			La faire feuille-de-rose!
			
			Eh, gros bougre? Es-tu fou
			Que ta grosse bouche baise
			(Quand la lune est moins aigue)
			
			Le bon vin au gout des fraises
			De ces nymphes si sanglantes--
			Ce qu'on nomme 'les Anglaises'
			
			Envie-tu ces amantes [85]
			Qui le culte de Sapho
			Jouissent, petites tantes?
			
			N'exiges-tu quelque impot
			Sur ces fours des Lesbiennes
			Pour ton bon petit jambot?
			
			Permets-tu que ces chiennes
			Boivent de ta Marie miel,
			Sans que leur p'tits culs tiennent
			
			Memoire de tes autels?
			Ai-je dit assez, bretteur,
			Pour m'assurer de l'enfer?
			Bah! gros bougre du ciel! [86]
			
			
			
			VICTORY
			
			Ah, God! that thou has made me thus,
			Content of nought, intent to attain
			The summits of hills amorous,
			The crests desired of all of us,
			
			By that fierce superflux of pain,
			That battling with strange enemies,
			The awful holocaust of gain,
			And golden rushing of men slain
			
			Before Thy throne, whose woven lies,
			Fixed by enchantment in the dome
			Of fiery aether, burn with eyes
			Insatiate of Paradise--
			
			Fixed, if the curse of brackish foam
			Upon the salt unpiteous sea
			Be fixed, or if the faith of Rome
			Shall find in hearts of men a home
			
			While men are living, fair and free--
			Ah me, since justice must endure
			And draw her sword at last, and be
			The eternal conqueror of Thee. [87]
			
			And I, shall my support be sure
			In that great day of righteous war?
			Is my soul free? Is my heart pure?
			Shall life diseased in death find cure?
			
			Or shall the shameless barren whore
			That rules my ways be found my guide,
			Wed in bad bands so foul and sore
			That Liberty shall be not more
			
			Within my heart or at my side?
			O Pleasure, whom I made my god,
			And based my forehead for thy pride
			And took thy bastard for my bride,
			
			Subdued my shoulders to thy rod,
			Casting before thy feet the things,
			The virtues that thou didst hate; I trod
			A bloody winepress, and went shod
			
			With glorius feet stained through with rings,
			Kissed blood that leapt to feel the tongue
			Slip eager through the teeth, while clings
			The lissome body, borne on wings
			
			Of pain unspeakable, unsung,
			To that tormentor, red and cruel, [88]
			Those teeth that bit for joy, and clung
			Murderously amorous, while the young
			
			Tender flesh burned, a quivering fuel
			For strange desire, for strange desire,
			Passion and penitence, and dule,
			Love glowing some unholy jewel
			
			Glittering frightful mid the mire.
			Oh! Love, what utter sweetness yet!
			What agony of curst hell-fire,
			Shame, lust, and infamy, and ire,
			
			Wrath in the highest heavens set,
			Shame in the soul, and leaping lust
			On pleasure's flaming parapet,
			An Infanmy that I forget.
			
			As swords that flash forget the rust
			That clings them round, as fighting men
			Forget their wounds, with no distrust
			Of death. Yea, dust may turn to dust,
			
			Man's spirit to his God again,
			But memory cannot fade, and while [89]
			My Hot devouring kisses rain
			On thy worn face, in writhing pain
			
			Biting my lips, that fiercely smile
			As tigers' lips, and gnaw thy mouth,
			Till the blood spurts in dainty style
			And blinds and bruises me awhile,
			
			Yet satiates the awful drouth;
			I suck, and shudder, and rave, and clutch,
			Thy breasts, with wounds and sores uncouth,
			Drenched with diseases of the south,
			
			The hot south lands, where crooked crutch,
			The leprous arm, the withered hand,
			Bear sway, where thou wast nurtured, such
			A queen as men delight to touch.
			
			And I, between the wastes of sand
			In one great harbour by a well,
			Met thee, princess of such a band
			Of merchantmen; my curved brand
			
			Then was raised high, as wild of yell,
			We flashed and charged, and slew thy folk; [90]
			Thou camest to my bed to dwell--
			That day there clanged the gates of hell
			
			Behind us twain; we never spoke
			Save of love's bidding we might do,
			Save on our lust to place a yoke
			Too bitter to be lightly broke.
			
			Each might we drew on, and something new
			Of lust we learnt, insatiate we
			Who wrote in blood the volumes through
			That speak of love. But then there grew
			
			A giant lust, strong as the sea;
			And we with fresh delight assayed
			The fierce sweet bond of tribady,
			The strange strong sin of sodomy,
			
			And thus from foe to foe betrayed,
			No pain or pleasure but we knew
			Its utterest essence, whence we made
			All agonies, that God has paid
			
			With rotting blood, save one, that few
			Could dream of, so divine it is,
			So exquisite, so rich to do,
			The which to-night we meet unto-- [91]
			
			To consummate the angry bliss
			Of all excesses of delight;
			The pain of this divine disease,
			The luxury of the obscene kiss,
			
			The carnal anguish, and the sight
			Of sore bloody breasts and thighs,
			The bright green river foamed with white,
			The horrid spasms of the night.
			
			Long have we lusted on this wise;
			Now one delight, the last is left--
			Come, I will lick thine haggard eyes,
			And wallow on thee straddle-wise.
			
			Here with thy fingers fierce and deft,
			Take me, all bloddy as it is,
			And plunge within thy furious cleft
			My fierce red pillar to the heft!
			
			Suck deep the poison. Now I wis
			The sweet pollution of thy breath
			Was never so divine! Thy Kiss!
			Ah, sweet Lord Christ! So sweet as this!
			Ah, Christ! Together! Passion! Death! [92]
			
			
			
			SLEEPING IN CARTHAGE
			
			The month of thirst is ended. From the lips
			That hide their blushes in the golden wood
			A fervent fountain amorously slips,
			The dainty rivers of thy luscious blood;
			Red streams of sweet nepenthe that eclipse
			The milder nectar that the gods hold good--
			How my dry throat, held hard between thy hips,
			Shall drain the moon-wrought flow of womanhood!
			
			Divinest token of sterility,
			Strange barren fountain blushing from the womb,
			Like to an echo of Augustan gloom
			When all men drank this wine; it maddens me
			With yearnings after new divinity,
			Prize of thy draught, some where beyond the tomb.
			[93]
			
			
			
			WITH DOG AND DAME
			
			AN OCTOBER IDYLL
			
			The ways are golden with the leaves
			That Autumn blows about the air,
			The trees sing anthems of despair,
			And my fair mistress binds the sheaves
			Of yellow hair more loose, and weaves
			More subtly bars of song, that bear
			Bright children of love debonair,
			And laughter lightly comes, and reaves
			The garland from our sorrow's brow,
			Life rises up, is girt with song,
			Joy fills the cup, that flashes clear.
			The year may fade in whispers now,
			Shadow and silence now may throng
			The seasons -- we are happy here.
			
			Autumn is on us as we lie
			In creamy clouds of latticed light
			That hint at darkness, but descry
			A rosy flicker through the night,
			My mistress, my great Dane, and I. [94]
			
			We linger in the dusk -- her head
			Lolls on the pillow, and my eyes
			Catch rapture, as upon the bed
			He licks her lazy lips, and tries
			To tempt her tongue. My fires are fed.
			
			Her heavy dropping breasts entice
			My teeth to jewel them with blood,
			Her hand prepares the sacrifice
			She would desire of me, the flood
			That wells from shrines of Paradise.
			
			Her other hand is mischievous
			To bid the monster Dane grow mad,
			His red-haw gaze grows mutinous,
			Her eyes have lost the calm they had,
			My body grows all amorous.
			
			My tongue within her mouth excites
			Her dirtiest lust, her vilest dream;
			His greedy mouth her bosom bites;
			He cannot hold, his eyeballs gleam;
			He burns to consummate the rites.
			
			I yield him place: his ravening teeth
			Cling hard to her -- he buries him [95]
			Insane and furious in the sheath
			She opens for him -- wide and dim
			My mouth is amorous beneath.
			
			Her lips devour me, and I rave
			With pleasure to discern the love
			They twain exert, my lips who lave
			With doubled dew distilled above;
			To dog and woman I'm a slave,
			
			Nor move, though now essays the Dane
			To cool his weapon in my mouth;
			Her lust bestrides me, and is fain
			To quench in his sweet sweat her drouth
			Her finger probes my bowel again.
			
			All three enjoy once more, and I
			Am ready ever to renew
			These bestial orgie-nights, whereby
			Loose woman's love is spiced, as dew
			On tender spray of spring doth lie.
			
			Like the cold moon to earth and sun
			My mistress lingers in eclipse,
			We wake her passion, either one
			Licking each pouting pair of lips
			Till new sweet streams of nectar run. [96]
			
			'Tis Autumn, and the dying breeze
			Murmurs 'embrace'; the moon replies
			'Embrace'; the soughing of the trees
			Calls us to linger loverwise,
			And drain our passion to the lees.
			
			'Tis Autumn. The belated dove
			Calls through the beeches, that bestir
			Themselves to kiss the skies above,
			As I will kiss with him and her.
			Leave us, sweet Autumn, to our love. [97]
			
			
			
			Hermaphrodites Dream*
			
			
			I know that winged sprite
			Who flew from heaven -- was it hell? --
			Into these bounds of light
			And music -- yesternight --
			Had some new song to tell.
			
			I saw a living soul
			Flame into mortal dress;
			Whose glance -- a fiery coal,
			Whose lips -- a ruby bowl
			Whose wine was wickedness.
			
			They were strange lips, I ween,
			Whereon no kiss might be,
			And teeth were sharp therein;
			Ivory and white and keen,
			Tameless as hungering sea.
			
			Strange body of my desire,
			Voluptuous, lithe, and wan;
			For, on my eyes drawn nigher,
			My hot blood turns to fire,
			Seeing nor maid nor man. [98]
			
			Not maid, not man -- the breast
			Like palaces of gold,
			Yet where my lips caressed,
			In the wild dove's wild nest
			A dove too soft to hold.
			
			No dove that Hylas knew,
			No dove that Sappho kissed,
			Nor in wide Heaven there grew
			This child of stranger dew
			Than God's good spirit wist.
			
			Yet his wings bare him high,
			Divine beyond control,
			And, like for love to die,
			I felt his arrow fly
			Within my very soul.
			
			Ah Love! the ambiguous kiss,
			Not man's nor woman's touch,
			In that estatic bliss--
			Not hell's heat, as I wis,
			Had warmed us overmuch.
			
			Ah! Love! how fierce that night!
			With what unsung desire [99]
			Thy lips and mouth were bright,
			In mine eye to give light,
			And fire to kindle fire.
			
			Ah Love! nor king nor queen
			Of mine exhaustless flame,
			But comrade of my teen,
			Spouse of that epicene
			Incontinence of shame.
			
			Twin Love! Soul's dual spouse,
			Dream-serpent of my life,
			Rose-garland of my brows
			Within that ivory house,
			Sex with itself at strife.
			
			Were I a wanton stream,
			Thou mightest bathe in me,
			Yet in that happy dream
			Methought my heart did deem
			We mingled utterly.
			
			O sexless! deathless! fair
			Beyond the world to me,
			Thy love-gift I will wear,
			Thy joys my soul shall share,
			Being made one with thee. [100]
			
			So, love, the days may keep
			My nameless love from me;
			Yet over slumber's deep
			I will sail into sleep
			Thither to lie by thee,
			
			Hold thee with arms that cleave
			Lock thee in limbs that leap,
			Chain thee with lips that leave
			Kisses of blood to weave
			Castles of hope in sleep.
			
			Poppy! best flower whose bud
			Sends dreams to men that die,
			I drain thy drowsy flood
			That our impatient blood
			May mingle utterly.
			
			So, Hermes, thou art wed,
			So, Aphrodite, mine,
			In one sweet spirit shed
			In one ambrosial bed,
			In one fair frame divine.
			
			Like clouds in rain, like seas
			Exultant as they roll, [101]
			We mix in ecstacies,
			And, as breeze melts in breeze,
			Thy soul becomes my soul.
			
			I come to thee with tears,
			Nameless immortal dove;
			Forget the fleet-foot years
			In the incarnate spheres
			Of our mysterious Love. [102]
			
			
			
			'EREBUS'
			
			Something of monstrous in our love, our bed,
			Soothes me with strong desire,
			Strong but availing nothing -- black and red
			Thy body gleams, as fire
			Thy great eyes burn, thy lips respire
			It seems unnatural breath within their tomb.
			Ah! the red portals of thy dusky womb,
			Wherein my loves expire,
			'Twixt thy black breasts to rise, kissed hard by thee
			Till joy flows full once more, salt river to sweet sea.
			
			Fairer than roses are thy swarthy cheeks,
			Thine hair more sharp than gold;
			Purple is warmer than mere red, when seeks
			My love thy lips to hold.
			Ah Queen! that other's breasts are cold
			Being of wafted snowflakes beside thine;
			Her breasts give milk as thine the fiercest wine;
			Her ivory thighs enfold
			Limbs not so amorous as these that lie
			By the dark limbs, and lust for their imperial dye. [103]
			
			Thy mouth takes me within its eager lips;
			My mouth thirsts, drinking long
			Deep from the fount of love, whence out there slips
			An eager purple tongue,
			Sweet as the taste of summer song
			From thrush's tender throat, a tongue that tires
			My thirsty lips with its insatiate fires,
			While swart limbs soft and strong
			Grip my hot head, while thy lips kiss away
			With blood and foam the life from him thou wouldst not slay.
			[104]
			
			
			
			LA JUIVE
			
			Rose dotted with grey stars the bed
			Where my fair Jewess lay and smiled:
			Her breasts were full, her eyes were red,
			Her lips with God unreconciled.
			In wanton disarray, her hair
			Streamed jetty black -- Ah! God, how fair!
			
			The quilt had gold embroidery,
			About the room were furs and silk:
			Her eyes were full of devilry,
			Her finger-tips were soft as milk:
			Above the bed a crest was set,
			A gold and sapphire coronet.
			
			She was of noble birth, and -- best --
			A Jewess; her bad lips enticed
			My lips to taste; I held her breast
			Fresh from the crucifying Christ;
			It seemed her thighs were hot with blood
			Sucked from the bastard Son of God.
			
			I saw his broken body hang
			Sweating and bleeding on the cross; [105]
			I heard his curses champ and clang;
			I spat upon his reeking corse;
			I licked the spear; my feet were shod
			With iron as I kicked my God.
			
			Such frightful fancies dim my eyes --
			I can remember how his side
			Lay open for a lover's prize --
			I violate the Crucified!
			Hell shrieks with impious laugh; they sing
			A mad lewd chant; Hell hails me king!
			
			So runs my dream; but what am I?
			A lover by a Jewess' bed,
			A lover waiting wistfully
			For his desires to be fed;
			His only lust -- a lover's bliss,
			And with no language but a kiss!
			
			In her loose lusts I find again
			The memory of that dream gone by;
			Her kisses waken in my brain
			The picture of that infamy,
			The low dark hill, the storm, the star
			That lit my bestial lupanar! [106]
			
			Her breasts are Golgotha to me!
			Her lips, his dripping hands and feet!
			Her secret-cinctured armoury
			Of pleasures seems -- how utter sweet! --
			The gaping spear-wound in his side
			Wherein I smote the Crucified!
			
			Come, night! dip, shadows! Only let
			One incense-flame burn red and low,
			Regild the golden coronet,
			Gleam on her nude lewd hips, and glow
			On hours of weariless desire,
			A bastard and infernal fire.
			
			Smite me, my fiend-fair whore, nor spare
			My raging hips, but wake again
			The old desires ere I'm aware,
			Joy more intense from cruel pain:
			They say he hoped his crown to fix
			By his delirious crucifix.
			
			Yes, spare me not, red-lipped, low browed,
			Large-featured animal I love:
			Prolong the orgie, shriek aloud
			With drunken vehemence above
			All violence more than Corybant
			To our Iacchian God - Absinthe! [107]
			
			Ah! thy red lips, and its green glint!
			Its wavy splendour, and the dance
			Thy belly weaves, a triple hint
			Of Hell, and Algiers, and France!
			Ah! Judas-love! this flask we'll drain,
			Kiss hard -- and so to bed again! [108]
			
			
			NECROPHILIA
			
			Void of the ecstasies of Art
			It were in life to have lain by thee,
			And felt thy kisses rain on me,
			And the hot beating of thy heart,
			
			When thy warm sweat should leave me cold,
			And my worn soul find out no bliss
			In the obscenities I kiss,
			And the things shameful that I hold.
			
			My nostrils sniff the luxury
			Of flesh decaying, bowels torn
			Of festive worms, like Venus, born
			Of entrails foaming like the sea.
			
			Yea, thou art dead. Thy buttocks now
			Are swan-soft, and thou sweatest not;
			And hast a strange desire begot
			In me, to lick thy bloody brow;
			
			To gnaw thy hollow cheeks, and pull
			Thy lustful tongue from out it's sheath;
			To wallow in the bowels of death,
			And rip thy belly, and fill full [109]
			
			My hands with all putridities;
			To chew thy dainty testicles;
			To revel with the worms in Hell's
			Delight in such obscenities;
			
			To pour within thine heart the seed
			Mingled with poisonous discharge
			From a swollen gland, inflamed and large
			With gonorrhoea's delicious breed;
			
			To probe thy belly, and to drink
			The godless fluids, and the pool
			Of rank putrescence from the stool
			Thy hanged corpse gave, whose luscious stink
			
			Excites these songs sublime. The rod
			Gains new desire; dive, howl, cling, suck,
			Rave, shreik, and chew; excite the fuck,
			Hold me, I come! I'm dead! My God! [110]
			
			
			
			ABYSMOS*
			
			This is th' abyss! Implacable disease
			Springs from the black defilement of that kiss,
			That foul embrace that moulds these agonies.
			This is th' abyss!
			
			A serpent was my whore; her hellish hiss,
			Her slaver venoms soul and strength; life flees
			Repugnant from the corpse-caress. Ah, this
			
			Rots blood and body; see, the liquor's lees
			I drained, whose pangs are fierce with Syphilis.
			Christ God, damn soul, but quench the pain of these!
			This is th' abyss!
			
			* * *
			
			This is th' abyss. Behold wherein I lurk
			The lazar-house my mind, wherein do work
			The horrid charnel-priests, whose loathly song
			Sickens my soul, and quells the spirit strong.
			Hell-fire within my heart! and poisoned blood
			Through every vein and artery pours a flood
			Of devilish pain. This is th' abyss indeed;
			Fears on my mind and pains on body feed, [111]
			Serpents of hell that gnaw my bones, nor quench
			The fires of torture with the sickly stench
			Of many a venomed drug, that clings and cleaves,
			An clutches like a dead man's hand, and weaves
			Its subtle scheme of agony through me.
			Is God to help a mortal? Or are we
			Caught in Fate's mesh without a hope to 'scape?
			Ah! look around! In every darksome shape!
			Fearful, nude Venus grins. Alcyone
			Mocks with her sickening smile. Hill, moor, and lea
			Make me to hate them. Only Clytie there,
			Wild arms thrown wide, an agony of hair
			Streamed fierce behind her, seems to sympathize;
			Through selfish, yet despair in both our eyes
			Gives us a link of love. The darkling room
			Is fearsome; one red light throughout the gloom
			Thrills my void veins with horror. On the couch
			The gruesome hound with sleepy stare doth crouch.
			His red hard eye upon me. Every shelf
			Of noisome books reflects my hideous self!
			Lucky I burnt my picture! Snakes on floor
			Writhe, lick my legs, I fear them. By the door
			Yon horrid panther snarls. His eye inspires
			Fresh torments, to invade my soul with fires
			Too angry to assuage, and in its glass
			I see myself. I hate myself, alas! [112]
			More than all these. I cannot rid me of
			Myself, my hates, my tortures, or my love;
			My golden-haired Greek goddess, who divines
			In me a god, who cannot read the lines
			Of anguish on my forehead, neither scent
			The poison of breast, blood, and excrement!
			I gnash my teeth in impotent despair
			That I may never hold her heavenly hair
			Again, nor bite her lips, as once my teeth
			Met in her cheek, to cull a rosy wreath
			Of blood upon it, nor assuage the pangs
			Of love with hardy limbs, and dolorous fangs,
			And sweating body, crimsoning with gore,
			As her mad mouth devoured me. Never more
			Though years decay! With them my blood decays, 
			My bones rot inwardly, the venomed days
			Sink shaft on shaft of agony, the years
			Bring new distortions, miseries, and fears;
			New torture to my spirit, and forgot
			Of God, and health, and loveliness, I rot.
			Outward, my face and breast have leprous sores;
			Inward, my filthy blood; its poison pours
			Corruption through me. In the eyes of man
			I am contemned, the haughty one. God's fan
			Is eager on my threshing/floor; his rod
			Smites no vain stroke. Oh, how I curse thee, God! 
			[113]
			What is my aid? But yet to Satan's power
			I lend my utmost vigour for an hour,
			To wrest Thy damned throne from out thy hands!
			My aid? How shall I burst thy bitter bands,
			Strike off thy shackles, from thy fetters break,
			I, whom Thy name appals, whose vitals quake
			At the dim thought of Thee? Have mercy, Christ!
			Who suffered on the cross, who sacrificed
			Thy heaven for three hours. Ah! pity me,
			For years, not hours, condemned to agony
			Thrice Thine! Have pity, hear me, virgin queen,
			Whose pangs of childbirth were seven times more keen
			Than all, since love and memory of joy
			Thou hadst not, but the fear of shame to cloy
			Even the hope of motherhood. But I,
			Cut off from love and joy; its memory
			One black hell of distorted pain; my shame
			More horrid than that first unholy flame,
			That burnt my blood, and flung me in her arms,
			Whose filthy kisses and thrice loathly charms,
			Her purple lips, her acrid redolence,
			Her black lewd limbs, her breasts, whose foul incense
			Smoked like hell's mouth though pendulous they hung,
			Her devilish black belly, and her tongue
			Sharp as a tiger's tooth, lured on my lust.
			Oh! God in heaven! It is turned to dust [114]
			And dung and corpse-flesh! I can see even here
			(For changeful spectres haunt me) how a tear
			Of blood stood on my breast at her first bite:
			And day grew dusk, and twilight turned to night,
			And her vast coffin stood at hand. And there
			Naked as hell, legs wide flung out in the air,
			She lay and called me 'Satan'. As I came,
			Feeling a Satan, such a deathly flame
			Of lust of loathliness was kindled here
			In my bad blood, I leapt upon the bier,
			And consummated all the strange desire
			That burnt and branded all my blood with fire,
			Buried my teeth and limbs in swarthy flesh,
			While blood and sweat begat desire afresh,
			And yet twelve times the black womb vomited,
			And we lay there chilled bitterly, and dead,
			While thy lewd minions covered with a pall
			Our prostrate bodies, and with musical
			Loud voices raised the chant of funeral,
			Turned to fierce blasphemies, and words obscene.
			Nine hours we lay as dead, and then my queen
			Writhed in my arms again, and blood leapt up
			To our fresh kisses to fill full the cup
			Of horror to the brim. Again as dead
			Were we borne forth, and then -- Can I forget?
			I gripped thy glossy throat. My fingers met [115]
			Crushing through the skin and muscle, nerve and vein,
			And in that supreme agony of pain
			I drained myself of lust! That final clasp
			Was consummated in thy dying gasp!
			The frightful struggle ended; I leapt high,
			Caught sword, bared breast, and hurled myself to die,
			But thy mad slaves attacked me. These I slew
			-- So I half guess -- the next thing my soul knew,
			I was alone and naked in my bed.
			The sword, snapped, on the floor, with hateful red
			Blotches of blood, and clots of bloody hair
			On its infernal steel. And unaware
			Of thy last gift I slept. I have it now,
			Thy gift from Hell's door! Would to God somehow
			I had thee once alive -- to slay again! --
			Ah! Who crawls in upon me like a vain
			Damned ghost? Ugh! blotchy spectre! Fiend, aroint!
			Ah Christ, he creeps toward me ; evert joint
			Quivers with passion; he will tear my eyes!
			Away! more liquor! come, green cockatrice!
			Come, filthy draught of fire! green dancing fiend
			On serpent's vomit and whore's spittle weaned,
			Fire my fierce brain! resolve my rotted heart!
			Fill me with drunkenness! How changed thou art,
			Body, from that these women loved so well!
			God! will they still lust after me in Hell? [116]
			But this is Hell! Aha! if you were me,
			Blind staring cripple yonder, you should see
			Whether I lie! A cripple are you then?
			Look upon me, the leper among men,
			The corpse amoung the living! Intercede,
			Good pitying pitiable Christ! My need
			Is viler than my sins! Old sins, you tire!
			Come, some new devilry to reinspire
			My lips with frenzied laughter! Vain, ah, vain!
			Th' extreme of pleasure and the worst of pain,
			I have tasted all. No more, all hope must end --
			Hope! Damn that word! It mocks me like that friend
			Who comes to to see me daily -- I shall die
			Happier if I kill him; so shall I
			Reap on his body the last tare of lust,
			And shivel back into my primal dust
			Filled with all worms and horned beasts with wings,
			The reptile that sweats acrid juice, and stings
			With bloody teeth and tongue! Oh, all the room
			Spits fire and dung, and vomits forth a spume
			Of tawny sickly death! All blotched and dark,
			The putrid air is vital with a spark
			Of fiery eyes of yonder filthy hound!
			God! I am reeling brain and body! I swound!
			The floor heaves up! The worms devour my breast!
			Beasts and lewd fish and winged things infest [117]
			Each vital part! Screech, rats! more liquor! Come!
			Rumble, you rotting whore-skin of a drum!
			I care not! Scream, you rats! Snakes, bite and hiss!
			Hell's spawn, I mouth you with this putrid kiss!
			Satan! Damnation! This is the abyss! [118] 
This page last updated: 03/01/2018
