The Poetry Corner

When London Calls

By Victor James Daley

They leave us - artists, singers, all When London calls aloud, Commanding to her Festival The gifted crowd. She sits beside the ship-choked Thames, Sad, weary, cruel, grand; Her crown imperial gleams with gems From many a land. From overseas, and far away, Come crowded ships and ships Grim-faced she gazes on them; yea, With scornful lips. The garden of the earth is wide; Its rarest blooms she picks To deck her board, this haggard-eyed Imperatrix. Sad, sad is she, and yearns for mirth; With voice of golden guile She lures men from the ends of earth To make her smile. The student of wild human ways In wild new lands; the sage With new great thoughts; the bard whose lays Bring youth to age; The painter young whose pictures shine With colours magical; The singer with the voice divine She lures them all. But all their new is old to her Who bore the Anakim; She gives them gold or Charon's fare As suits her whim. Crowned Ogress - old, and sad, and wise She sits with painted face And hard, imperious, cruel eyes In her high place. To him who for her pleasure lives, And makes her wish his goal, A rich Tarpeian gift she gives That slays his soul. The story-teller from the Isles Upon the Empire's rim, With smiles she welcomes - and her smiles Are death to him. For Her, whose pleasure is her law, In vain the shy heart bleeds The Genius with the Iron jaw Alone succeeds. And when the Poet's lays grow bland, And urbanised, and prim - She stretches forth a jewelled hand And strangles him. She sits beside the ship-choked Thames With Sphinx-like lips apart Mistress of many diadems Death in her heart!