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And speaking to the western wind, In the sped and turning time of the revolving sky As a top unwinding like a dropped fable; He dreams of taking leave, unraveling the coil Upending his foil Of listless sights as daylight creeps one more tread And sweet belief breaks down once again: Days that are ******* like a sad hunt When the tracker is bent On tragic orchestrations that only lead to a duel . . . Undoing, Oh must it be, "Must we fit?" Let us know and get on with it. In his bed the women are only dreams Phantoms, iridescent sirens.   .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    . Yes! I am not King Lir, nor could ever be; Am a child cast out, transfigured, remote Innocent, prey to the white flaming truth The growing down, that clothes my name Inconsequential, sheathed with shame, Polite, capricious, calamitous; Empty of all, it is unanimous Nor even the memory of ripeness Invisible, a drop in the pool. I am weary . . .  I am weary . . . I shall whisper to the newborns when I am old. Shall I build upon the strand?  Have swordplay with the sea? I shall tear my hair, mutter to the moon, bury my wounded knees I have heard the Selkies singing, sailing with the breeze. I do not think they will give their skin to me. I have known them gliding beyond the ninth wave. I still hear them sing so sweetly, weaving sorrows, on my back Carving the blue waters as the waves are turning black. We come and go in cycles with the moon, as tidal waves Seep and seethe, foam and heave, lone captains setting sail, In folly with a capsize brimming, before our boat has been bailed.                                                                                                                        — after Eliot
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May 31, 2012
May 31, 2012 at 1:03 PM UTC
The Song of S. Ormond Winfall
And speaking to the western wind, In the sped and turning time of the revolving sky As a top unwinding like a dropped fable; He dreams of taking leave, unraveling the coil Upending his foil Of listless sights as daylight creeps one more tread And sweet belief breaks down once again: Days that are ******* like a sad hunt When the tracker is bent On tragic orchestrations that only lead to a duel . . . Undoing, Oh must it be, "Must we fit?" Let us know and get on with it. In his bed the women are only dreams Phantoms, iridescent sirens.   .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    . Yes! I am not King Lir, nor could ever be; Am a child cast out, transfigured, remote Innocent, prey to the white flaming truth The growing down, that clothes my name Inconsequential, sheathed with shame, Polite, capricious, calamitous; Empty of all, it is unanimous Nor even the memory of ripeness Invisible, a drop in the pool. I am weary . . .  I am weary . . . I shall whisper to the newborns when I am old. Shall I build upon the strand?  Have swordplay with the sea? I shall tear my hair, mutter to the moon, bury my wounded knees I have heard the Selkies singing, sailing with the breeze. I do not think they will give their skin to me. I have known them gliding beyond the ninth wave. I still hear them sing so sweetly, weaving sorrows, on my back Carving the blue waters as the waves are turning black. We come and go in cycles with the moon, as tidal waves Seep and seethe, foam and heave, lone captains setting sail, In folly with a capsize brimming, before our boat has been bailed.                                                                                                                        — after Eliot
Poem in progress
ormond
Written by
Irish
May 31, 2012
May 31, 2012 at 1:03 PM UTC
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