The Poetry Corner

To His Love Instead Of A Promised Picture-Book

By Edward Powys Mathers (As Translator)

The greater and the lesser ills: He waved his grey hand wearily Back to the anger of the sea, Then forward to the blue of hills. Out from the shattered barquenteen The black frieze-coated sailors bore Their dying despot to the shore And wove a crazy palanquin. They found a valley where the rain Had worn the fern-wood to a paste And tiny streams came down in haste To eastward of the mountain chain. And here was handiwork of Cretes, And olives grew beside a stone, And one slim phallos stood alone Blasphemed at by the paroquets. Hard by a wall of basalt bars The night came like a settling bird, And here he wept and slept and stirred Faintly beneath the turning stars. Then like a splash of saffron whey That spills from out a bogwood bowl Oozed from the mountain clefts the whole Rich and reluctant light of day. And when he neither moved nor spoke And did not heed the morning call, They laid him underneath the wall And wrapped him in a purple cloak. From the Modern Persian.