furnace ash--?Blown leaves, devastating,?Falling about the world...
Out of the furnace mouth--?Out of the giant mouth--?The raging, turgid, mouth--?Fall fiery blossoms?Gold with the gold of buttercups?In a field at sunset,?Or huskier gold of dandelions,?Warmed in sun-leavings,?Or changing to the paler hue?At the creamy hearts of primroses.
Charge the converter, workman--?Tired from the long night??But the earth shall suck up darkness--?The earth that holds so much...?And out of these molten flowers,?Shall shape the heavy fruit...
Then open the valves--?Drive the fires high,?Your blossoms nurturing.?(Day is at the gates?And a young wind...)
Put by your rod, comrade,?And look with me, shading your eyes...?Do you not see--?Through the lucent haze?Out of the converter rising--?In the spirals of fire?Smiting and blinding,?A shadowy shape?White as a flame of sacrifice,?Like a lily swaying?
III
The ore leaping in the crucibles,?The ore communicant,?Sending faint thrills along the leads...?Fire is running along the roots of the mountains...?I feel the long recoil of earth?As under a mighty quickening...?(Dawn is aglow in the light of the Iron...)?All palpitant, I wait...
IV
Here ye, Dictators--late Lords of the Iron,?Shut in your council rooms, palsied, depowered--?The blooded, implacable Word??Not whispered in cloture, one to the other,?(Brother in fear of the fear of his brother...)?But chanted and thundered?On the brazen, articulate tongues of the Iron?Babbling in flame...
Sung to the rhythm of prisons dismantled,?Manacles riven and ramparts defaced...?(Hearts death-anointed yet hearing life calling...)?Ankle chains bursting and gallows unbraced...
Sung to the rhythm of arsenals burning...?Clangor of iron smashing on iron,?Turmoil of metal and dissonant baying?Of mail-sided monsters shattered asunder...
Hulks of black turbines all mangled and roaring,?Battering egress through ramparted walls...?Mouthing of engines, made rabid with power,?Into the holocaust snorting and plunging...
Mighty converters torn from their axis,?Flung to the furnaces, vomiting fire,?Jumbled in white-heaten masses disshapen...?Writhing in flame-tortured levers of iron...
Gnashing of steel serpents twisting and dying...?Screeching of steam-glutted cauldrons rending...?Shock of leviathans prone on each other...?Scaled flanks touching, ore entering ore...?Steel haunches closing and grappling and swaying?In the waltz of the mating locked mammoths of iron,?Tasting the turbulent fury of living,?Mad with a moment's exuberant living!?Crash of devastating hammers despoiling..?Hands inexorable, marring?What hands had so cunningly moulded...
Structures of steel welded, subtily tempered,?Marvelous wrought of the wizards of ore,?Torn into octaves discordantly clashing,?Chords never final but onward progressing?In monstrous fusion of sound ever smiting on sound
in mad vortices whirling...
Till the ear, tortured, shrieks for cessation?Of the raving inharmonies hatefully mingling...?The fierce obligato the steel pipes are screaming...?The blare of the rude molten music of Iron...
FRANK LITTLE AT CALVARY
I
He walked under the shadow of the Hill?Where men are fed into the fires?And walled apart...?Unarmed and alone,?He summoned his mates from the pit's mouth?Where tools rested on the floors?And great cranes swung?Unemptied, on the iron girders.?And they, who were the Lords of the Hill,?Were seized with a great fear,?When they heard out of the silence of wheels?The answer ringing?In endless reverberations?Under the mountain...
So they covered up their faces?And crept upon him as he slept...?Out of eye-holes in black cloth?They looked upon him who had flung?Between them and their ancient prey?The frail barricade of his life...?And when night--that has connived at so much--?Was heavy with the unborn day,?They haled him from his bed...
Who might know of that wild ride??Only the bleak Hill--?The red Hill, vigilant,?Like a blood-shot eye?In the black mask of night--?Dared watch them as they raced?By each blind-folded street?Godiva might have ridden down...?But when they stopped beside the Place,?I know he turned his face?Wistfully to the accessory night...
And when he saw--against the sky,?Sagged like a silken net?Under its load of stars--?The black bridge poised?Like a gigantic spider motionless...?I know there was a silence in his heart,?As of a frozen sea,?Where some half lifted arm, mid-way?Wavers, and drops heavily...
I know he waved to life,?And that life signaled back, transcending space,?To each high-powered sense,?So that he missed no gesture of the wind?Drawing the shut leaves close...?So that he saw the light on comrades' faces?Of camp fires out of sight...?And the savor of meat and bread?Blew in his nostrils... and the breath?Of unrailed spaces?Where shut wild clover smelled as sweet?As a virgin in her bed.
I know he looked once at America,?Quiescent, with her great flanks on the globe,?And once at the skies whirling above him...?Then all that he had spoken against?And struck against and thrust against?Over the frail barricade of his life?Rushed between him and the stars...
II
Life thunders on...?Over the black bridge?The line of lighted cars?Creeps like a monstrous serpent?Spooring gold...
Watchman, what of the track?
Night... silence... stars...?All's Well!
III
Light...?(Breaking mists...?Hills gliding like hands out of a slipping hold...)?Light over the pit mouths,?Streaming in tenuous rays down the black gullets of the Hill... (The copper, insensate, sleeping in the buried lode.)?Light...?Forcing the clogged windows of arsenals...?Probing with long sentient fingers in the copper chips...?Gleaming metallic and cold?In numberless slivers of steel...?Light over the trestles and the iron clips?Of the black bridge--poised like a gigantic spider motionless-- Sweet inquisition of light,
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