Entry tags:
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| Poem | ||
| to James Schuyler | ||
| There I could never be a boy, | ||
| though I rode like a god when the horse reared. | ||
| At a cry from mother I fell to my knees! | ||
| there I fell, clumsy and sick and good, | ||
| though I bloomed on the back of a frightened black mare | ||
| who had leaped windily at the start of a leaf | ||
| and she never threw me. | ||
| I had a quick heart | ||
| and my thighs clutched her back. | ||
| I loved her fright, which was against me | ||
| into the air! and the diamond white of her forelock | ||
| which seemed to smart with thoughts as my heart smarted with life! | ||
| and she'd toss her head with the pain | ||
| and paw the air and champ the bit, as if I were Endymion | ||
| and she, moon-like, hated to love me. | ||
| All things are tragic | ||
| when a mother watches! and she wishes upon herself | ||
| the random fears of a scarlet soul, as it breathes in and out | ||
| and nothing chokes, or breaks from triumph to triumph! | ||
| I knew her but I could not be a boy, | ||
| for in the billowing air I was fleet and green | ||
| riding blackly through the ethereal night | ||
| towards men's words which I gracefully understood, | ||
| and it was given to me | ||
| as the soul is given the hands | ||
| to hold the ribbons of life! | ||
| as miles streak by beneath the moon's sharp hooves | ||
| and I have mastered the speed and strength which is the armor of the world. | ||
| Frank O'Hara | ||