I. TO DESIRE (Here a dancer enters and dances.) Who is she that is fragrant and desirable, Clothed but enough to wake wantonness, And proud of her polished lithe body and her narrowing of kohl-darkened eyelids with arrows between them? Ah, ah, ah! Goddess of the world, Young serpent in the veins of the rock, In the mountain of j**els a young serpent, in the veins of a man a sweet viper all emerald: ah Goddess Are we proof to the hilt, are you pleased with us When the splendor of your undulant insolence Pricks the dark entrails of d**h, his foregathered grow hot for you, the skeleton stands up to be amorous? Ah, ah, ah! Goddess of the flesh Will you think it a gift lacking grace That the gates of the grave have been battered before you, the iron doors to us dead in the deepest abysm? For who has gone down to the dead or has touched them? Did Jesus of Nazareth when he lay in deep hell For three days and since lived as they say and has failed us? No man nor no woman has gone down to us dead Living until now, but the proof is here now, ah beautiful torture us again and again. We are fleshless, we tremble to your flesh, Dear Goddess to taste of the dew On your arms when you dance or to lip at the glitter of your burnished thighs or the breast of your barrenness. In the book of your triumphs with no term Inscribe a more wonderful deed, That you quickened the dead, that you lifted the flesh of the fleshless, ah Goddess, ah! dancing, us dead men. (The dancer goes out.) II. TO DEATH (A second dancer enters and dances.) Was it lovely to lie among violets ablossom in the valleys of love on the breast of the south? It was lovely but lovelier now To behold the calm head of the dancer we dreaded, his curls are as tendrils of the vineyard, O d**h Sweet and more sweet is your dancing. Like the swoon of fulfilment of love in some lonelier vale among flowers is the languor that flushes us, O why did we fear him, for d**h Is a beautiful youth and his eyes are sleepy, the lids droop heavily with wine when he wakens, And his breast is more smooth than a dove's. Fair Garda, gay water with olives engarlanded, lake of blue laughter in a bay of the Alps It is better for our spirits to be here In the desolate hollows of darkness beholding the beauty of our dancer than at rest on your hills
Of anemones and jonquils immingled. And gay from the glacier womb, boy-throated for gladness to shout where the snow-crags throng Ran foaming the rivulet Rhone, When the mountains were sprung for his pa**age, the ridges of granite were splintered; and lovely the lake was Under the vineyards of Vaud, And at evening empurpling the peaks of the Chablais were painted on the sleep and deep shadow of its waters When the sundown was flame on la Dole. But the best of the course is the last broad slumber, O river of France to forget and go down Slow-gliding and sultrily stagnant Past Aries to the Gulf of the Lion and that azure and beautiful grave in the waves of the south That are warmest and best . . . and an end . . . (The dancer has gone out.) III. TO VICTORY (A third dancer enters and dances.) Use us again, you in the world only of goddesses worshipful now or adored, Helmeted victory! How did we bow, even in dream, visions betraying us, unto some other and base Power when your splendor there Struck on the gates? Use us again, awfully beautiful. Blood will reblossom from d**h Burning to minister All its revived fire at your feet, only to merit an eye-glance, or flash of your hand's Gauntleted majesty. Pounding of guns clear you a path, trample the ports of decision and triumph on the slain. Men when they fall in it Gayly they die, scattering for flowers rosy and white at your feet the red blood and pale brains Carpeting battlefields. Towering in steel, terribly armed, which of the daughters of heaven is so hotly desired? None has embraced you yet, All of us burn, beautifully mad, frantic with lust of your beauty and with thirst of your mouth's Terrible maidenhood; Holy and white, under the steel, hide the sweet limbs of our longing desire in a deep Sacred virginity. Emperors and lords gave her in vain cities of gold and whole nations of blood, for she took Gifts, but rejected them. Neither a king's bribe nor a bold armorer's hammer prevails to unrivet the steel Belt of her maidenhood, Yet shall our prayer surely be heard. Goddess of glory revoke our exemption of d**h, Twice let us die for you. Use us again, though but an hour: surely the prayer is as humble as the gift would be great, Helmeted Victory. (The dancer goes out.)