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Adonis

1.

 

Each of us like you

has died once,

has passed through drift of wood-leaves,

cracked and bent

and tortured and unbent

in the winter-frost,

the burnt into gold points,

lighted afresh,

crisp amber, scales of gold-leaf,

gold turned and re-welded

in the sun;

 

each of us like you

has died once,

each of us has crossed an old wood-path

and found the winter-leaves

so golden in the sun-fire

that even the live wood-flowers

were dark.

 

2.

 

Not the gold on the temple-front

where you stand

is as gold as this,

not the gold that fastens your sandals,

nor thee gold reft

through your chiselled locks,

is as gold as this last year's leaf,

not all the gold hammered and wrought

and beaten

on your lover's face.

brow and bare breast

is as golden as this:

 

each of us like you

has died once,

each of us like you

stands apart, like you

fit to be worshipped.

h
Written by
Hilda Doolittle
1886-1961 / American
Lines·Words
37·157
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