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- NEVER the nightingale,
- Oh, my dear,
- Never again the lark
- Thou wilt hear;
- Though dusk and the morning still
- Tap at thy window-sill,
- Though ever love call and call
- Thou wilt not hear at all,
- My dear, my dear.
- Adelaide Crapsey

- IN the cold I will rise, I will bathe
- In waters of ice; myself
- Will shiver, and shrive myself,
- Alone in the dawn, and anoint
- Forehead and feet and hands;
- I will shutter the windows from light,
- I will place in their sockets the four
- Tall candles and set them aflame
- In the grey of the dawn; and myself
- Will lay myself straight in my bed,
- And draw the sheet under my chin.
- Adelaide Crapsey

- LISTEN . . .
- With faint dry sound,
- Like steps of passing ghosts,
- The leaves, frost-crisp'd, break from the trees
- And fall.
- Adelaide Crapsey

- STILL as
- On windless nights
- The moon-cast shadows are,
- So still will be my heart when I
- Am dead.
- Adelaide Crapsey

- IF it
- Were lighter touch
- Than petal of flower resting
- On grass, oh still too heavy it were,
- Too heavy!
- Adelaide Crapsey

- I KNOW
- Not these my hands
- And yet I think there was
- A woman like me once had hands
- Like these.
- Adelaide Crapsey

- JUST now,
- Out of the strange
- Still dust . . . as strange, as still . . .
- A white moth flew . . . Why am I grown
- So cold?
- Adelaide Crapsey

- SUN and wind and beat of sea,
- Great lands stretching endlessly . . .
- Where be bonds to bind the free?
- All the world was made for me!
- Adelaide Crapsey

Written in a Moment of Exasperation
- HOW can you lie so still? All day I watch
- And never a blade of all the green sod moves
- To show where restlessly you toss and turn,
- And fling a desperate arm or draw up knees
- Stiffened and aching from their long disuse;
- I watch all night and not one ghost comes forth
- To take its freedom of the midnight hour.
- Oh, have you no rebellion in your bones?
- The very worms must scorn you where you lie,
- A pallid mouldering acquiescent folk,
- Meek habitants of unresented graves.
- Why are you there in your straight row on row
- Where I must ever see you from my bed
- That in your mere dumb presence iterate
- The text so weary in my ears: "Lie still
- And rest; be patient and lie still and rest."
- I'll not be patient! I will not lie still!
- There is a brown road runs between the pines,
- And further on the purple woodlands lie,
- And still beyond blue mountains lift and loom;
- And I would walk the road and I would be
- Deep in the wooded shade and I would reach
- The windy mountain tops that touch the clouds.
- My eyes may follow but my feet are held.
- Recumbent as you others must I too
- Submit? Be mimic of your movelessness
- With pillow and counterpane for stone and sod?
- And if the many sayings of the wise
- Teach of submission I will not submit
- But with a spirit all unreconciled
- Flash an unquenched defiance to the stars.
- Better it is to walk, to run, to dance,
- Better it is to laugh and leap and sing,
- To know the open skies of dawn and night,
- To move untrammel'd down the flaming noon,
- And I will clamour it through weary days
- Keeping the edge of deprivation sharp,
- Nor with the pliant speaking on my lips
- Of resignation, sister to defeat.
- I'll not be patient. I will not lie still.
- And in ironic quietude who is
- The despot of our days and lord of dust
- Needs but, scarce heeding, wait to drop
- Grim casual comment on rebellion's end:
- "Yes; yes . . . Wilful and petulant but now
- As dead and quiet as the other are."
- And this each body and ghost of you hath heard
- That in your graves do therefore lie so still.
- Adelaide Crapsey
Saranac Lake
November, 1913

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