Page:The Poems of Henry Kendall (1920).djvu/115

 Her eyes are as splendours that break in the rain at the set of the sun,

But turn from the steps of Campaspe—a Woman to look at and shun!

Dost thou know of the cunning of Beauty? Take heed to thyself and beware

Of the trap in the droop in the raiment—the snare in the folds of the hair!

She is fulgent in flashes of pearl, the breeze with her breathing is sweet,

But fly from the face of the girl—there is death in the fall of her feet!

Is she maiden or marvel of marble? Oh, rather a tigress at wait

To pounce on thy soul for her pastime—a leopard for love or for hate.

Woman of shadow and furnace! She biteth her lips to restrain

Speech that springs out when she sleepeth, by the stirs and the starts of her pain.

As music half-shapen of sorrow, with its wants and its infinite wail,

Is the voice of Campaspe, the beauty at bay with her passion dead-pale.

Go out from the courts of her loving, nor tempt the fierce dance of desire

Where thy life would be shrivelled like stubble in the stress and the fervour of fire!

I know of one, gentle as moonlight—she is sad as the shine of the moon,

But touching the ways of her eyes are: she comes to my soul like a tune—

Like a tune that is filled with faint voices of the loved and the lost and the lone,

Doth this stranger abide with my silence: like a tune with a tremulous tone.

The leopard, we call her, Campaspe! I pluck at a rose and I stir

To think of this sweet-hearted maiden—what name is too tender for her?