Madison Cawein

A Broken Rainbow On The Skies Of May

   A Broken rainbow on the skies of May,
   Touching the dripping roses and low clouds,
   And in wet clouds its scattered glories lost:
   So in the sorrow of her soul the ghost
   Of one great love, of iridescent ray,
   Spanning the roses dim of memory,
   Against the tumult of life’s rushing crowds
   A broken rainbow on the skies of May.
   A flashing humming-bird among the flowers,
   Deep-coloured blooms; its slender tongue and bill
   Sucking the syrups and the calyxed myrrhs,
   Till, being full of sweets, away it whirrs:
   Such was his love that won her heart’s rich bowers
   To give to him their all, their honied showers,
   The bloom from which he drank his body’s fill
   A flashing humming-bird among the flowers.
   A moon, moth-white, that through long mists of fleece
   Moves amber-girt into a bulk of black,
   And, lost to vision, rims the black with froth:
   A love that swept its moon, like some great moth,
   Across the heaven of her soul’s young peace;
   And, smoothly passing, in the clouds did cease
   Of time, through which its burning light comes back
   A moon, moth-white, that moves through mists of fleece.
   A bolt of living thunder downward hurled,
   Momental blazing from the piled-up storm,
   That instants out the mountains and the ocean,
   The towering crag, then blots the sight’s commotion:
   Love, love that swiftly coming bared the world,
   The deeps of life, 'round which fate’s clouds are curled,
   And, ceasing, left all night and black alarm
   A bolt of living thunder downward hurled.
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