The Sphinx
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- In a dim corner of my room
- For longer than my fancy thinks,
- A beautiful and silent Sphinx
- Has watched me through the shifting gloom.
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- Inviolate and immobile
- She does not rise, she does not stir
- For silver moons are nought to her,
- And nought to her the suns that reel.
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- Red follows grey across the air
- The waves of moonlight ebb and flow
- But with the dawn she does not go
- And in the night-time she is there.
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- Dawn follows Dawn, and Nights grow old
- And all the while this curious cat
- Lies crouching on the Chinese mat
- With eyes of satin rimmed with gold.
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- Upon the mat she lies and leers,
- And on the tawny throat of her
- Flutters the soft and fur
- Or ripples to her pointed ears.
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- Come forth my lovely seneschal,
- So somnolent, so statuesque,
- Come forth you exquisite grotesque,
- Half woman and half animal,
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- Come forth my lovely languorous Sphinx,
- And put your head upon my knee
- And let me stroke your throat and see
- Your body spotted like the Lynx,
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- And let me touch those curving claws
- Of yellow ivory, and grasp
- The tail that like a monstrous Asp
- Coils round your heavy velvet paws.
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- A thousand weary centuries
- Are thine, while I have hardly seen
- Some twenty summers cast their green
- For Autumn’s gaudy liveries,
-
- But you can read the Hieroglyphs
- On the great sandstone obelisks,
- And you have talked with Basilisks
- And you have looked on Hippogriffs
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- O tell me, were you standing by
- When Isis to Osiris knelt,
- And did you watch the Egyptian melt
- Her union for Anthony,
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- And drink the jewel-drunken wine,
- And bend her head in mimic awe
- To see the huge pro-consul draw
- The salted tunny from the brine?
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- And did you mark the Cyprian kiss
- With Adon on his catafalque,
- And did you follow Amanalk
- The god of Heliopolis?
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- And did you talk with Thoth, and did
- You hear the moon-horned Io weep
- And know the painted kings who sleep
- Beneath the wedge-shaped Pyramid?
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- Lift up your large black satin eyes
- Which are like cushions where one sinks,
- Fawn at my feet, fantastic Sphinx,
- And sing me all your memories.
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- Sing to me of the Jewish maid
- Who wandered with the Holy Child,
- And how you led them through the wild,
- And how they slept beneath your shade.
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- Sing to me of that odorous
- Green eve when crouching by the marge
- You heard from Adrian’s gilded barge
- The laughter of Antinous,
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- And lapped the stream, and fed your drouth,
- And watched with hot and hungry stare
- The ivory body of that rare
- Young slave with his pomegranate mouth.
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- Sing to me of the Labyrinth
- In which the two-formed bull was stalled,
- Sing to me of the night you crawled
- Across the temple’s granite plinth
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- When through the purple corridors
- The screaming scarlet Ibis flew
- In terror, and a horrid dew
- Dripped from the moaning Mandragores,
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- And the great torpid crocodile
- Within the great shed slimy tears,
- And tore the jewels from his ears
- And staggered back into the Nile,
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- And the Priests cursed you with shrill psalms
- As in your claws you seized their snake
- And crept away with it to slake
- Your passion by the shuddering palms.
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- Who were your lovers, who were they
- Who wrestled for you in the dust?
- Which was the vessel of your Lust,
- What Leman had you every day?
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- Did giant lizards come and crouch
- Before you on the reedy banks?
- Did Gryphons with great metal flanks
- Leap on you in your trampled couch,
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- Did monstrous hippopotami
- Come sidling to you in the mist
- Did gilt-scaled dragons writhe and twist
- With passion as you passed them by?
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- And from that brick-built Lycian tomb
- What horrible Chimaera came
- With fearful heads and fearful flame
- To breed new wonders from your womb?
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- Or had you shameful secret guests
- And did you harry to your home
- Some Nereid coiled in amber foam
- With curious rock-crystal breasts;
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- Or did you, treading through the froth,
- Call to the brown Sidonian
- For tidings of Leviathan,
- Leviathan of Behemoth?
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- Or did you when the sun was set,
- Climb up the cactus-covered slope
- To meet your swarthy Ethiop
- Whose body was of polished jet?
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- Or did you while the earthen skiffs
- Dropt down the gray Nilotic flats
- At twilight, and the flickering bats
- Flew round the temple’s triple glyphs
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- Steal to the border of the bar
- And swim across the silent lake
- And slink into the vault and make
- The Pyramid your lupanar,
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- Till from each black sarcophagus
- Rose up the painted, swathed dead,
- Or did you lure unto your bed
- The ivory-horned Trageophos?
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- Or did you love the God of flies
- Who plagued the Hebrews and was splashed
- With wine unto the waist, or Pasht
- Who had green beryls for her eyes?
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- Or that young God, the Tyrian,
- Who was more amorous than the dove
- Of Ashtaroth, or did you love
- The God of the Assyrian,
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- Whose wings that like transparent talc
- Rose high above his hawk-faced head
- Painted with silver and with red
- And ribbed with rods of Oreichalch?
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- Or did huge Apis from his car
- Leap down and lay before your feet
- Big blossoms of the honey-sweet,
- And honey-coloured nenuphar?
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- How subtle secret is your smile;
- Did you love none then? Nay I know
- Great Ammon was your bedfellow,
- He lay with you beside the Nile.
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- The river-horses in the slime
- Trumpeted when they saw him come
- Odorous with Syrian galbanum
- And smeared with spikenard and with thyme.
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- He came along the river bank
- Like some tall galley argent-sailed
- He strode across the waters, mailed
- In beauty and the waters sank.
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- He strode across the desert sand,
- He reached the valley where you lay,
- He waited till the dawn of day,
- Then touched your black breasts with his hand.
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- You kissed his mouth with mouth of flame,
- You made the horned-god your own,
- You stood behind him on his throne;
- You called him by his secret name,
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- You whispered monstrous oracles
- Into the caverns of his ears,
- With blood of goats and blood of steers
- You taught him monstrous miracles,
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- While Ammon was your bedfellow
- Your chamber was the steaming Nile
- And with your curved Archaic smile
- You watched his passion come and go.
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- With Syrian oils his brows were bright
- And wide-spread as a tent at noon
- His marble limbs made pale the moon
- And lent the day a larger light,
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- His long hair was nine cubits span
- And coloured like that yellow gem
- Which hidden in their garments’ hem,
- The merchants bring from Kurdistan.
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- His face was as the must that lies
- Upon a vat of new-made wine,
- The seas could not insapphirine
- The perfect azure of his eyes.
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- His thick, soft throat was white as milk
- And threaded with thin veins of blue
- And curious pearls like frozen dew
- Were broidered on his flowing silk.
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- On pearl and porphyry pedestalled
- He was too bright to look upon
- For on his ivory breast there shone
- The wondrous ocean-emerald,-
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- That mystic, moonlight jewel which
- Some diver of the Colchian caves
- Had found beneath the blackening waves
- And carried to the Colchian witch.
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- Before his gilded galiot
- Ran naked vine-wreathed corybants
- And lines of swaying elephants
- Knelt down to draw his chariot,
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- And lines of swarthy Nubians
- Bore up his litter as he rode
- Down the great granite-paven road,
- Between the nodding peacock fans.
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- The merchants brought him steatite
- From Sidon in their painted ships;
- The meanest cup that touched his lips
- Was fashioned from a chrysolite.
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- The merchants brought him cedar chests
- Of rich apparel, bound with cords;
- His train was borne by Memphian lords;
- Young kings were glad to be his guests.
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- Ten hundred shaven priests did bow
- To Ammon’s altar day and night,
- Ten hundred lamps did wave their light
- Through Ammon’s carven house,- and now
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- Foul snake and speckled adder with
- Their young ones crawl from stone to stone
- For ruined is the house, and prone
- The great rose-marble monolith;
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- Wild ass or strolling jackal comes
- And crouches in the mouldering gates,
- Wild satyrs call unto their mates
- Across the fallen fluted drums.
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- And on the summit of the pile,
- The blue-faced ape of Horus sits
- And gibbers while the fig-tree splits
- The pillars of the peristyle.
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- The God is scattered here and there;
- Deep hidden in the windy sand
- I saw his giant granite hand
- Still clenched in impotent despair.
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- And many a wandering caravan
- Of stately negroes, silken-shawled,
- Crossing the desert, halts appalled
- Before the neck that none can span.
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- And many a bearded Bedouin
- Draws back his yellow-striped burnous
- To gaze upon the Titan thews
- Of him who was thy paladin.
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- Go seek his fragments on the moor,
- And wash them in the evening dew,
- And from their pieces make anew
- Thy mutilated paramour.
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- Go seek them where they lie alone
- And from their broken pieces make
- Thy bruised bedfellow! And wake
- Mad passions in the senseless stone!
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- Charm his dull ear with Syrian hymns;
- He loved your body; oh be kind!
- Pour spikenard on his hair and wind
- Soft rolls of linen round his limbs;
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- Wind round his head the figured coins,
- Stain with red fruits the pallid lips;
- Weave purple for his shrunken hips
- And purple for his barren loins!
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- Away to Egypt! Have no fear;
- Only one God has ever died,
- Only one God has let His side
- Be wounded by a soldier’s spear.
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- But these, thy lovers, are not dead;
- Still by the hundred-cubit gate
- Dog-faced Anubis sits in state
- With lotus lilies for thy head.
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- Still from his chair of porphyry
- Giant Memnon strains his lidless eyes
- Across the empty land and cries
- Each yellow morning unto thee.
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- And Nilus with his broken horn
- Lies in his black and oozy bed
- And till thy coming will not spread
- His waters on the withering corn.
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- Your lovers are not dead, I know,
- And will rise up and hear thy voice
- And clash their symbols and rejoice
- And run to kiss your mouth,- and so
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- Set wings upon your argosies!
- Set horses to your ebon car!
- Back to your Nile! Or if you are
- Grown sick of dead divinities;
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- Follow some roving lion’s spoor
- Across the copper-coloured plain,
- Reach out and hale him by the mane
- And bid him to be your paramour!
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- Crouch by his side upon the grass
- And set your white teeth in his throat,
- And when you hear his dying note,
- Lash your long flanks of polished brass
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- And take a tiger for your mate,
- Whose amber sides are flecked with black,
- And ride upon his gilded back
- In triumph through the Theban gate,
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- And toy with him in amorous jests,
- And when he turns and snarls and gnaws,
- Oh smite him with your jasper claws
- And bruise him with your agate breasts!
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- Why are you tarrying? Get hence!
- I weary of your sullen ways.
- I weary of your steadfast gaze,
- Your somnolent magnificence.
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- Your horrible and heavy breath
- Makes the light flicker in the lamp,
- And on my brow I feel the damp
- And dreadful dews of night and death,
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- Your eyes are like fantastic moons
- That shiver in some stagnant lake,
- Your tongue is like a scarlet snake
- That dances to fantastic tunes.
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- Your pulse makes poisonous melodies,
- And your black throat is like the hole
- Left by some torch or burning coal
- On Saracenic tapestries.
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- Away! the sulphur-coloured stars
- Are hurrying through the Western gate!
- Away! Or it may be too late
- To climb their silent silver cars!
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- See, the dawn shivers round the gray,
- Gilt-dialled towers, and the rain
- Streams down each diamonded pane
- And blurs with tears the wannish day.
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- What snake-tressed fury, fresh from Hell,
- With uncouth gestures and unclean,
- Stole from the poppy-drowsy queen
- And led you to a student’s cell?
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- What songless, tongueless ghost of sin
- Crept through the curtains of the night
- And saw my taper burning bright,
- And knocked and bade you enter in?
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- Are there not others more accursed,
- Whiter with leprosies than I?
- Are Abana and Pharphar dry,
- That you come here to slake your thirst?
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- False Sphinx! False Sphinx! By reedy Styx,
- Old Charon, leaning on his oar,
- Waits for my coin. Go thou before
- And leave me to my crucifix,
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- Whose pallid burden, sick with pain,
- Watches the world with wearied eyes.
- And weeps for every soul that dies,
- And weeps for every soul in vain.