The Singing Man | Page 2

Josephine Preston Peabody
faces dim.?In the mines; in the mills?Where the ceaseless thunder fills?Spaces of the human brain?Till all thought is turned to pain.?Where the skirl of wheel on wheel,?Grinding him who is their tool,?Makes the shattered senses reel?To the numbness of the fool.?Perisht thought, and halting tongue?(Once it spoke;--once it sung!)?Live to hunger, dead to song.?Only heart-beats loud with wrong?Hammer on,--How long??... How long_?--_How long?
Search for him;?Search for him;?Where the crazy atoms swim?Up the fiery furnace-blast.?You shall find him, at the last,--?He whose forehead braved the sun,--?Wreckt and tortured and undone.?Where no breath across the heat?Whispers him that life was sweet;?But the sparkles mock and flare,?Scattering up the crooked air.?(Blackened with that bitter mirk,--?Would God know His handiwork?)
Thought is not for such as he;?Naught but strength, and misery;?Since, for just the bite and sup,?Life must needs be swallowed up.?Only, reeling up the sky,?Hurtling flames that hurry by,?Gasp and flare, with Why_--_Why,?... Why?...
Why the human mind of him?Shrinks, and falters and is dim?When he tries to make it out:?What the torture is about.--?Why he breathes, a fugitive?Whom the World forbids to live.?Why he earned for his abode,?Habitation of the toad!?Why his fevered day by day?Will not serve to drive away?Horror that must always haunt:--?... Want_ ... _Want!?Nightmare shot with waking pangs;--?Tightening coil, and certain fangs,?Close and closer, always nigh ...?... Why_?... _Why?
Why he labors under ban?That denies him for a man.?Why his utmost drop of blood?Buys for him no human good;?Why his utmost urge of strength?Only lets Them starve at length;--?Will not let him starve alone;?He must watch, and see his own?Fade and fail, and starve, and die.

... Why_?... _Why?

Heart-beats, in a hammering song,?Heavy as an ox may plod,?Goaded--goaded--faint with wrong,?Cry unto some ghost of God?... How long_?... _How long??.......... How long?
III
Seek him yet. Search for him!?You shall find him, spent and grim;?In the prisons, where we pen?These unsightly shards of men.?Sheltered fast;?Housed at length;?Clothed and fed, no matter how!--?Where the householders, aghast,?Measure in his broken strength?Nought but power for evil, now.?Beast-of-burden drudgeries?Could not earn him what was his:?He who heard the world applaud?Glories seized by force and fraud,?He must break,--he must take!--?Both for hate and hunger's sake.?He must seize by fraud and force;?He must strike, without remorse!?Seize he might; but never keep.?Strike, his once!--Behold him here.?(Human life we buy so cheap,?Who should know we held it dear?)
No denial,--no defence?From a brain bereft of sense,?Any more than penitence.?But the heart-beats now, that plod?Goaded--goaded--dumb with wrong,?Ask not even a ghost of God?.............How long?
_When the Sea gives up its dead,?Prison caverns, yield instead?This, rejected and despised;?This, the Soiled and Sacrificed!?Without form or comeliness;?Shamed for us that did transgress;?Bruised, for our iniquities,?With the stripes that are all his!?Face that wreckage, you who can.?It was once the Singing Man._
IV
Must it be?--Must we then?Render back to God again?This His broken work, this thing,?For His man that once did sing??Will not all our wonders do??Gifts we stored the ages through,?(Trusting that He had forgot)--?Gifts the Lord requirèd not?
Would the all-but-human serve!?Monsters made of stone and nerve;?Towers to threaten and defy?Curse or blessing of the sky;?Shafts that blot the stars with smoke;?Lightnings harnessed under yoke;?Sea-things, air-things, wrought with steel,?That may smite, and fly, and feel!?Oceans calling each to each;?Hostile hearts, with kindred speech.?Every work that Titans can;?Every marvel: save a man,?Who might rule without a sword.--
Is a man more precious, Lord?
Can it be?--Must we then?Render back to Thee again?Million, million wasted men??Men, of flickering human breath,?Only made for life and death?
Ah, but see the sovereign Few,?Highly favored, that remain!?These, the glorious residue,?Of the cherished race of Cain.?These, the magnates of the age,?High above the human wage,?Who have numbered and possesst?All the portion of the rest!
What are all despairs and shames,?What the mean, forgotten names?Of the thousand more or less,?For one surfeit of success?
For those dullest lives we spent,?Take these Few magnificent!?For that host of blotted ones,?Take these glittering central suns.?Few;--but how their lustre thrives?On the million broken lives!?Splendid, over dark and doubt,?For a million souls gone out!?These, the holders of our hoard,--
Wilt thou not accept them, Lord?
V
Oh, in the wakening thunders of the heart,?--The small lost Eden, troubled through the night,?Sounds there not now,--forboded and apart,
Some voice and sword of light??Some voice and portent of a dawn to break?--?Searching like God, the ruinous human shard?Of that lost Brother-man Himself did make,
And Man himself hath marred?
It sounds!--And may the anguish of that birth?Seize on the world; and may all shelters fail,?Till we behold new Heaven and new Earth
Through the rent Temple-vail!?When the high-tides that threaten near and far?To sweep away our guilt before the sky,--?Flooding the waste of this dishonored Star,
Cleanse, and o'erwhelm, and cry!--
Cry, from the deep of world-accusing waves,?With longing more than all since Light began,?Above the nations,--underneath the graves,--
'Give back the Singing Man!'
THE TREES
I
Now, in the thousandth year,?When April's near,?Now comes it that the great ones of the
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