The Poetry Corner

Senlin, A Biography: Part 03: His Cloudy Destiny - 01

By Conrad Potter Aiken

Senlin sat before us and we heard him. He smoked his pipe before us and we saw him. Was he small, with reddish hair, Did he light his pipe with a meditative stare And a twinkling flame reflected in blue eyes? I am alone: said Senlin; in a forest of leaves The single leaf that creeps and falls. The single blade of grass in a desert of grass That none foresaw and none recalls. The single shell that a green wave shatters In tiny specks of whiteness on brown sands . . . How shall you understand me with your hearts, Who cannot reach me with your hands? . . . The city dissolves about us, and its walls Are the sands beside a sea. We plunge in a chaos of dunes, white waves before us Crash on kelp tumultuously, Gulls wheel over foam, the clouds blow tattered, The sun is swallowed . . . Has Senlin become a shore? Is Senlin a grain of sand beneath our footsteps, A speck of shell upon which waves will roar? . . . Senlin! we cry . . . Senlin! again . . . no answer, Only the crash of sea on a shell-white shore. Yet, we would say, this is no shore at all, But a small bright room with lamplight on the wall; And the familiar chair Where Senlin sat, with lamplight on his hair.