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Sword Blades & Poppy Seed
poppy seed   The Shadow
Amy Lowell
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       Paul Jannes was working very late,
       For this watch must be done by eight
       To-morrow or the Cardinal
       Would certainly be vexed. Of all
       His customers the old prelate
       Was the most important, for his state
       Descended to his watches and rings,
       And he gave his mistresses many things
       To make them forget his age and smile
       When he paid visits, and they could while
       The time away with a diamond locket
       Exceedingly well. So they picked his pocket,
       And he paid in jewels for his slobbering kisses.
       This watch was made to buy him blisses
       From an Austrian countess on her way
       Home, and she meant to start next day.
       Paul worked by the pointed, tulip-flame
       Of a tallow candle, and became
       So absorbed, that his old clock made him wince
       Striking the hour a moment since.
       Its echo, only half apprehended,
       Lingered about the room. He ended
       Screwing the little rubies in,
       Setting the wheels to lock and spin,
       Curling the infinitesimal springs,
       Fixing the filigree hands. Chippings
       Of precious stones lay strewn about.
       The table before him was a rout
       Of splashes and sparks of coloured light.
       There was yellow gold in sheets, and quite
       A heap of emeralds, and steel.
       Here was a gem, there was a wheel.
       And glasses lay like limpid lakes
       Shining and still, and there were flakes
       Of silver, and shavings of pearl,
       And little wires all awhirl
       With the light of the candle. He took the watch
       And wound its hands about to match
       The time, then glanced up to take the hour
       From the hanging clock.
                     Good, Merciful Power!
       How came that shadow on the wall,
       No woman was in the room! His tall
       Chiffonier stood gaunt behind
       His chair. His old cloak, rabbit-lined,
       Hung from a peg. The door was closed.
       Just for a moment he must have dozed.
       He looked again, and saw it plain.
       The silhouette made a blue-black stain
       On the opposite wall, and it never wavered
       Even when the candle quavered
       Under his panting breath. What made
       That beautiful, dreadful thing, that shade
       Of something so lovely, so exquisite,
       Cast from a substance which the sight
       Had not been tutored to perceive?
       Paul brushed his eyes across his sleeve.
       Clear-cut, the Shadow on the wall
       Gleamed black, and never moved at all.
       Paul's watches were like amulets,
       Wrought into patterns and rosettes;
       The cases were all set with stones,
       And wreathing lines, and shining zones.
       He knew the beauty in a curve,
       And the Shadow tortured every nerve
       With its perfect rhythm of outline
       Cutting the whitewashed wall. So fine
       Was the neck he knew he could have spanned
       It about with the fingers of one hand.
       The chin rose to a mouth he guessed,
       But could not see, the lips were pressed
       Loosely together, the edges close,
       And the proud and delicate line of the nose
       Melted into a brow, and there
       Broke into undulant waves of hair.
       The lady was edged with the stamp of race.
       A singular vision in such a place.
       He moved the candle to the tall
       Chiffonier; the Shadow stayed on the wall.
       He threw his cloak upon a chair,
       And still the lady's face was there.
       From every corner of the room
       He saw, in the patch of light, the gloom
       That was the lady. Her violet bloom
       Was almost brighter than that which came
       From his candle's tulip-flame.
       He set the filigree hands; he laid
       The watch in the case which he had made;
       He put on his rabbit cloak, and snuffed
       His candle out. The room seemed stuffed
       With darkness. Softly he crossed the floor,
       And let himself out through the door.
       The sun was flashing from every pin
       And wheel, when Paul let himself in.
       The whitewashed walls were hot with light.
       The room was the core of a chrysolite,
       Burning and shimmering with fiery might.
       The sun was so bright that no shadow could fall
       From the furniture upon the wall.
       Paul sighed as he looked at the empty space
       Where a glare usurped the lady's place.
       He settled himself to his work, but his mind
       Wandered, and he would wake to find
       His hand suspended, his eyes grown dim,
       And nothing advanced beyond the rim
       Of his dreaming. The Cardinal sent to pay
       For his watch, which had purchased so fine a day.
       But Paul could hardly touch the gold,
       It seemed the price of his Shadow, sold.
       With the first twilight he struck a match
       And watched the little blue stars hatch
       Into an egg of perfect flame.
       He lit his candle, and almost in shame
       At his eagerness, lifted his eyes.
       The Shadow was there, and its precise
       Outline etched the cold, white wall.
       The young man swore, "By God! You, Paul,
       There's something the matter with your brain.
       Go home now and sleep off the strain."
       The next day was a storm, the rain
       Whispered and scratched at the window-pane.
       A grey and shadowless morning filled
       The little shop. The watches, chilled,
       Were dead and sparkless as burnt-out coals.
       The gems lay on the table like shoals
       Of stranded shells, their colours faded,
       Mere heaps of stone, dull and degraded.
       Paul's head was heavy, his hands obeyed
       No orders, for his fancy strayed.
       His work became a simple round
       Of watches repaired and watches wound.
       The slanting ribbons of the rain
       Broke themselves on the window-pane,
       But Paul saw the silver lines in vain.
       Only when the candle was lit
       And on the wall just opposite
       He watched again the coming of IT,
       Could he trace a line for the joy of his soul
       And over his hands regain control.
       Paul lingered late in his shop that night
       And the designs which his delight
       Sketched on paper seemed to be
       A tribute offered wistfully
       To the beautiful shadow of her who came
       And hovered over his candle flame.
       In the morning he selected all
       His perfect jacinths. One large opal
       Hung like a milky, rainbow moon
       In the centre, and blown in loose festoon
       The red stones quivered on silver threads
       To the outer edge, where a single, fine
       Band of mother-of-pearl the line
       Completed. On the other side,
       The creamy porcelain of the face
       Bore diamond hours, and no lace
       Of cotton or silk could ever be
       Tossed into being more airily
       Than the filmy golden hands; the time
       Seemed to tick away in rhyme.
       When, at dusk, the Shadow grew
       Upon the wall, Paul's work was through.
       Holding the watch, he spoke to her:
       "Lady, Beautiful Shadow, stir
       Into one brief sign of being.
       Turn your eyes this way, and seeing
       This watch, made from those sweet curves
       Where your hair from your forehead swerves,
       Accept the gift which I have wrought
       With your fairness in my thought.
       Grant me this, and I shall be
       Honoured overwhelmingly."
       The Shadow rested black and still,
       And the wind sighed over the window-sill.
       Paul put the despised watch away
       And laid out before him his array
       Of stones and metals, and when the morning
       Struck the stones to their best adorning,
       He chose the brightest, and this new watch
       Was so light and thin it seemed to catch
       The sunlight's nothingness, and its gleam.
       Topazes ran in a foamy stream
       Over the cover, the hands were studded
       With garnets, and seemed red roses, budded.
       The face was of crystal, and engraved
       Upon it the figures flashed and waved
       With zircons, and beryls, and amethysts.
       It took a week to make, and his trysts
       At night with the Shadow were his alone.
       Paul swore not to speak till his task was done.
       The night that the jewel was worthy to give.
       Paul watched the long hours of daylight live
       To the faintest streak; then lit his light,
       And sharp against the wall's pure white
       The outline of the Shadow started
       Into form. His burning-hearted
       Words so long imprisoned swelled
       To tumbling speech. Like one compelled,
       He told the lady all his love,
       And holding out the watch above
       His head, he knelt, imploring some
       Littlest sign.
                     The Shadow was dumb.
       Weeks passed, Paul worked in fevered haste,
       And everything he made he placed
       Before his lady. The Shadow kept
       Its perfect passiveness. Paul wept.
       He wooed her with the work of his hands,
       He waited for those dear commands
       She never gave. No word, no motion,
       Eased the ache of his devotion.
       His days passed in a strain of toil,
       His nights burnt up in a seething coil.
       Seasons shot by, uncognisant
       He worked. The Shadow came to haunt
       Even his days. Sometimes quite plain
       He saw on the wall the blackberry stain
       Of his lady's picture. No sun was bright
       Enough to dazzle that from his sight.
       There were moments when he groaned to see
       His life spilled out so uselessly,
       Begging for boons the Shade refused,
       His finest workmanship abused,
       The iridescent bubbles he blew
       Into lovely existence, poor and few
       In the shadowed eyes. Then he would curse
       Himself and her! The Universe!
       And more, the beauty he could not make,
       And give her, for her comfort's sake!
       He would beat his weary, empty hands
       Upon the table, would hold up strands
       Of silver and gold, and ask her why
       She scorned the best which he could buy.
       He would pray as to some high-niched saint,
       That she would cure him of the taint
       Of failure. He would clutch the wall
       With his bleeding fingers, if she should fall
       He could catch, and hold her, and make her live!
       With sobs he would ask her to forgive
       All he had done. And broken, spent,
       He would call himself impertinent;
       Presumptuous; a tradesman; a nothing; driven
       To madness by the sight of Heaven.
       At other times he would take the things
       He had made, and winding them on strings,
       Hang garlands before her, and burn perfumes,
       Chanting strangely, while the fumes
       Wreathed and blotted the shadow face,
       As with a cloudy, nacreous lace.
       There were days when he wooed as a lover, sighed
       In tenderness, spoke to his bride,
       Urged her to patience, said his skill
       Should break the spell. A man's sworn will
       Could compass life, even that, he knew.
       By Christ's Blood! He would prove it true!
       The edge of the Shadow never blurred.
       The lips of the Shadow never stirred.
       He would climb on chairs to reach her lips,
       And pat her hair with his finger-tips.
       But instead of young, warm flesh returning
       His warmth, the wall was cold and burning
       Like stinging ice, and his passion, chilled,
       Lay in his heart like some dead thing killed
       At the moment of birth. Then, deadly sick,
       He would lie in a swoon for hours, while thick
       Phantasmagoria crowded his brain,
       And his body shrieked in the clutch of pain.
       The crisis passed, he would wake and smile
       With a vacant joy, half-imbecile
       And quite confused, not being certain
       Why he was suffering; a curtain
       Fallen over the tortured mind beguiled
       His sorrow. Like a little child
       He would play with his watches and gems, with glee
       Calling the Shadow to look and see
       How the spots on the ceiling danced prettily
       When he flashed his stones. "Mother, the green
       Has slid so cunningly in between
       The blue and the yellow. Oh, please look down!"
       Then, with a pitiful, puzzled frown,
       He would get up slowly from his play
       And walk round the room, feeling his way
       From table to chair, from chair to door,
       Stepping over the cracks in the floor,
       Till reaching the table again, her face
       Would bring recollection, and no solace
       Could balm his hurt till unconsciousness
       Stifled him and his great distress.
       One morning he threw the street door wide
       On coming in, and his vigorous stride
       Made the tools on his table rattle and jump.
       In his hands he carried a new-burst clump
       Of laurel blossoms, whose smooth-barked stalks
       Were pliant with sap. As a husband talks
       To the wife he left an hour ago,
       Paul spoke to the Shadow. "Dear, you know
       To-day the calendar calls it Spring,
       And I woke this morning gathering
       Asphodels, in my dreams, for you.
       So I rushed out to see what flowers blew
       Their pink-and-purple-scented souls
       Across the town-wind's dusty scrolls,
       And made the approach to the Market Square
       A garden with smells and sunny air.
       I feel so well and happy to-day,
       I think I shall take a Holiday.
       And to-night we will have a little treat.
       I am going to bring you something to eat!"
       He looked at the Shadow anxiously.
       It was quite grave and silent. He
       Shut the outer door and came
       And leant against the window-frame.
       "Dearest," he said, "we live apart
       Although I bear you in my heart.
       We look out each from a different world.
       At any moment we may be hurled
       Asunder. They follow their orbits, we
       Obey their laws entirely.
       Now you must come, or I go there,
       Unless we are willing to live the flare
       Of a lighted instant and have it gone."
       A bee in the laurels began to drone.
       A loosened petal fluttered prone.
       "Man grows by eating, if you eat
       You will be filled with our life, sweet
       Will be our planet in your mouth.
       If not, I must parch in death's wide drouth
       Until I gain to where you are,
       And give you myself in whatever star
       May happen. O You Beloved of Me!
       Is it not ordered cleverly?"
       The Shadow, bloomed like a plum, and clear,
       Hung in the sunlight. It did not hear.
       Paul slipped away as the dusk began
       To dim the little shop. He ran
       To the nearest inn, and chose with care
       As much as his thin purse could bear.
       As rapt-souled monks watch over the baking
       Of the sacred wafer, and through the making
       Of the holy wine whisper secret prayers
       That God will bless this labour of theirs;
       So Paul, in a sober ecstasy,
       Purchased the best which he could buy.
       Returning, he brushed his tools aside,
       And laid across the table a wide
       Napkin. He put a glass and plate
       On either side, in duplicate.
       Over the lady's, excellent
       With loveliness, the laurels bent.
       In the centre the white-flaked pastry stood,
       And beside it the wine flask. Red as blood
       Was the wine which should bring the lustihood
       Of human life to his lady's veins.
       When all was ready, all which pertains
       To a simple meal was there, with eyes
       Lit by the joy of his great emprise,
       He reverently bade her come,
       And forsake for him her distant home.
       He put meat on her plate and filled her glass,
       And waited what should come to pass.
       The Shadow lay quietly on the wall.
       From the street outside came a watchman's call
       "A cloudy night. Rain beginning to fall."
       And still he waited. The clock's slow tick
       Knocked on the silence. Paul turned sick.
       He filled his own glass full of wine;
       From his pocket he took a paper. The twine
       Was knotted, and he searched a knife
       From his jumbled tools. The cord of life
       Snapped as he cut the little string.
       He knew that he must do the thing
       He feared. He shook powder into the wine,
       And holding it up so the candle's shine
       Sparked a ruby through its heart,
       He drank it. "Dear, never apart
       Again! You have said it was mine to do.
       It is done, and I am come to you!"
       Paul Jannes let the empty wine-glass fall,
       And held out his arms. The insentient wall
       Stared down at him with its cold, white glare
       Unstained! The Shadow was not there!
       Paul clutched and tore at his tightening throat.
       He felt the veins in his body bloat,
       And the hot blood run like fire and stones
       Along the sides of his cracking bones.
       But he laughed as he staggered towards the door,
       And he laughed aloud as he sank on the floor.
       The Coroner took the body away,
       And the watches were sold that Saturday.
       The Auctioneer said one could seldom buy
       Such watches, and the prices were high.