Robert Graves

The Eremites

We may well wonder at those bearded hermits
Who like the scorpion and the basilisk
Couched in the desert sands, to undo
Their scrufy flesh with tortures.
 
They drank from pools fouled by the ass and the camel,
Chewed uncooked millet pounded between stones,
Wore but a shame—rag, dusk or dawn,
And rolled in thorny places.
 
In the wilderness there are no women;
Yet hermits harbour in their shrunken loins
A penitential paradise,
A leaping—house of glory.
 
Solomons of a thousand lusty love—chants,
These goatish men, burned Aethiopian black,
Kept vigil till the angelic whores
Should lift the latch of pleasure.
 
And what Atellan orgies of the soul
Were celebrated then among they rocks
They testify themselves in books
That rouse Atellan laughter.
 
Haled back at last to wear the ring and mitre,
They clipped their beards and, for their stomachs’ sake,
Drank now and then a little wine,
And tasted cakes and honey.
 
Observe then how they disciplined the daughters
Of noble widows, who must fast and thirst,
Abjure down—pillows, rouge and curls,
Deform their delicate bodies:
 
Whose dreams were curiously beset by visions
Of stinking hermits in a wilderness
Pressing unnatural lusts on them
Until they wakened screaming.
 
Such was the virtue of our pious fathers:
To refine pleasure in the hungry dream.
Pity for them, but pity too for us —
Our beds by their leave lain in.

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