Allen Tate

The Traveller

To Archibald MacLeish
 
The afternoon with heavy hours
Lies vacant on the wanderer’s sight
And sunset waits whose cloudy towers
Expect the legions of the night
 
Till sullen thunder from the cave
Of twilight with deliberate swell
Whispers the air his darkening slave
To loose the nether bolts of hell
 
To crush the battlements of cloud
The wall of light around the West
So that the swarming dark will crowd
The traveller upon his quest
 
And all the air with heavy hours
Sinks on the wanderer’s dull sight
And the thick dark whose hidden towers
Menace his travel to the night
 
Rolls forward, backward hill to hill
Until the seeker knows not where
Beyond the shade of Peachers’ Mill
In the burnt meadow, with colourless hair
 
The secret ones around a stone
Their lips withdrawn in meet surprise
Lie still, being naught but bone
With naught but space within their eyes
 
Until bewildered by the road
And half-forgetful of his quest
The wanderer with such a load
Of breathing, being too late a guest
 
Turns back, so near the secret stone,
Falls down breathless at last and blind,
And a dark shift within the bone
Brings him the end he could not find.
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