DITTY
The moon will run all consciences to cover,
Night is now the easy peer of day;
Little boys no longer sight the
Streaked in the sky, and cattle
Warily out in search of misty hay.
Look at the blackbird, the pretty eager swallow,
The buzzard, and all the birds that
With the smooth essential
Of time through men, who fail.
For now the moon with friendless light
On hill and housetop, street and marketplace,
Men will plunge, mile after mile of men,
To crush this lucent madness of the face,
Go home and put their heads upon the pillow,
Turn with whatever shift the darkness cleaves,
Tuck in their eyes, and
The flying dark with sleep like falling leaves.
Allen Tate
Other author posts
Retroduction To American History
Cats walk the floor at midnight; that enemy of fog, The moon, wraps the bedpost in receding stillness; Collects all weary nothings and lugs away the towers, The pinnacles of dust that feed the subway
Farewell To Anactoria
(Sappho)Never the tramp of foot or horse, Nor lusty cries from ship at sea, Shall I call loveliest on the dark earth-My heart moves lovingly I say that what one loves is best:
Elegy
Jefferson Davis: No more the white refulgent streets Never the dry hollows of the Shall he in fine courtesy
More Sonnets At Christmas IV
Gay citizen, myself, and thoughtful friend, Your ghosts are Plato's Christians in the cave Unfix your necks, turn to the door; the Gives back the cheated and light