Page:Captain Craig; a book of poems.djvu/50

36 The Marseillaise and Schubert's Serenade— And always in a way to make me think Procrustes had the germ of music in him. And when this interesting reprobate Began to talk—then there were more vagaries: He made a reeking fetich of all filth, Apparently; but there was yet revealed About him, through his words and on his flesh, That ostracizing nimbus of a soul's Abject, apologetic purity— That phosphorescence of sincerity— Which indicates the curse and the salvation Of a life wherein starved art may never perish.

"One evening I remember clearliest Of all that I passed with him. Having wrought, With his nerve-ploughing ingenuity, The Träumerei into a Titan's nightmare, The man sat down across the table from me And all at once was ominously decent. '"The more we measure what is ours to use,"' He said then, wiping his froth-plastered mouth With the inside of his hand, '" the less we groan For what the gods refuse." I've had that sleeved A decade for you. Now but one more stein, And I shall be prevailed upon to read The only sonnet I have ever made;