Page:Eight Harvard Poets.djvu/41

 SALVATION ARMY

DRUM pounds out the hymn, Loud with gaudy angels, tinsel cherubim, To drown the fanfare of the street, And with exultant lilting beat, To mingle the endless rumble of carts, The scrape of feet, the noise of marts And dinning market stalls, where women shout Their wares, and meat hangs out — Grotesque, distorted by the gas flare's light — Into one sacred rhythm for the Devil's spite.

A woman's thin, raucous voice Carries the tune, bids men rejoice, Bathe in God's mercy, Draw near and learn salvation, see With their own eyes the mystery. Cymbals, at the hands of a tired girl, Slim wisp amid the swirl Of crowded streets, take up the tune, Monotonously importune. Faces are wan in the arc-light's livid glare; A wind gust carries the band's flare Of song, in noisy eddies echoing, Round lonely black street-corners, 30