Page:Collected poems Robinson, Edwin Arlington.djvu/145

 What is a gift without the soul to guide it? "Poor dears, and they have cancers? Oh!"—she says; And away she works at that new altar-cloth For the Reverend Hieronymus Mackintosh— Third person, Jerry. "Jerry," she says, "can say Such lovely things, and make life seem so sweet!" Jerry can drink, also.—And there she goes, Like a whirlwind through an orchard in the springtime— Throwing herself away as if she thought The world and the whole planetary circus Were a flourish of apple-blossoms. Look at her! And here is this infernal world of ours— And hers, if only she might find it out— Starving and shrieking, sickening, suppurating, Whirling to God knows where. . . But look at her!' "And after that it came about somehow, Almost as if the Fates were killing time, That she, the spendthrift of a thousand joys, Eode in her turn with me, and in her turn Made observations : 'Now there goes a man,' She said, 'who feeds his very soul on poison: No matter what he does, or where he looks, He finds unhappiness; or, if he fails To find it, he creates it, and then hugs it: Pygmalion again for all the world— Pygmalion gone wrong. You know I think If when that precious animal was young, His mother, or some watchful aunt of his, Had spanked him with Pendennis and Don Juan, And given him the Lady of the Lake, Or Cord and Creese, or almost anything, There might have been a tonic for him? Listen: When he was possibly nineteen years old