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    Bitterness of Death

    by D.H. Lawrence
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    Page 1 of 1
    From New Poems (1916).

    I.

    Ah, stern, cold man,
    How can you lie so relentless hard
    While I wash you with weeping water!
    Do you set your face against the daughter
    Of life? Can you never discard
    Your curt pride's ban?

    You masquerader!
    How can you shame to act this part
    Of unswerving indifference to me?
    You want at last, ah me!
    To break my heart
    Evader!

    You know your mouth
    Was always sooner to soften
    Even than your eyes.
    Now shut it lies
    Relentless, however often
    I kiss it in drouth.

    It has no breath
    Nor any relaxing. Where,
    Where are you, what have you done?
    What is this mouth of stone?
    How did you dare
    Take cover in death!

    II.

    Once you could see,
    The white moon show like a breast revealed
    By the slipping shawl of stars.
    Could see the small stars tremble
    As the heart beneath did wield
    Systole, diastole.

    All the lovely macrocosm
    Was woman once to you,
    Bride to your groom.
    No tree in bloom
    But it leaned you a new
    White bosom.

    And always and ever
    Soft as a summering tree
    Unfolds from the sky, for your good,
    Unfolded womanhood;
    Shedding you down as a tree
    Sheds its flowers on a river.

    I saw your brows
    Set like rocks beside a sea of gloom,
    And I shed my very soul down into your thought;
    Like flowers I fell, to be caught
    On the comforted pool, like bloom
    That leaves the boughs.

    III.

    Oh, masquerader,
    With a hard face white-enamelled,
    What are you now?
    Do you care no longer how
    My heart is trammelled,
    Evader?

    Is this you, after all,
    Metallic, obdurate
    With bowels of steel?
    Did you never feel?--
    Cold, insensate,
    Mechanical!

    Ah, no!--you multiform,
    You that I loved, you wonderful,
    You who darkened and shone,
    You were many men in one;
    But never this null
    This never-warm!

    Is this the sum of you?
    Is it all nought?
    Cold, metal-cold?
    Are you all told
    Here, iron-wrought?
    Is this what's become of you?
    Page 1 of 1
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