160 My health improved. I even learned to swim. But like some little lad forced by a wench With his pure tongue her abject thirst to quench, I was corrupted, terrified, allured, And though old doctor Colt pronounced me cured Of what, he said, were mainly growing pains, The wonder lingers and the shame remains.

Canto Two

There was a time in my demented youth When somehow I suspected that the truth About survival after death was known 170 To every human being: I alone Knew nothing, and a great conspiracy Of books and people hid the truth from me. There was the day when I began to doubt Man's sanity: How could he live without Knowing for sure what dawn, what death, what doom Awaited consciousness beyond the tomb? And finally there was the sleepless night When I decided to explore and fight The foul, the inadmissible abyss, 180 Devoting all my twisted life to this One task. Today I'm sixty-one. Waxwings Are berry-pecking. A cicada sings. The little scissors I am holding are A dazzling synthesis of sun and star. I stand before the window and I pare My fingernails and vaguely am aware Of certain flinching likenesses: the thumb, Our grocer's son; the index, lean and glum College astronomer Starover Blue; 190 The middle fellow, a tall priest I knew; The feminine fourth finger, an old flirt; And little pinky clinging to her skirt. And I make mouths as I snip off the thin Strips of what Aunt Maud used to call «scarf-skin.» Maud Shade was eighty when a sudden hush Fell on her life. We saw the angry flush And torsion of paralysis assail Her noble cheek. We moved her to Pinedale, Famed for its sanitarium. There she'd sit 200 In the glassed sun and watch the fly that lit Upon her dress and then upon her wrist. Her mind kept fading in the growing mist. She still could speak. She paused, then groped, and found What seemed at first a serviceable sound, But from adjacent cells impostors took The place of words she needed, and her look Spelt imploration as she sought in vain To reason with the monsters in her brain. What moment in the gradual decay 210 Does resurrection choose? What year? What day? Who has the stopwatch? Who rewinds the tape? Are some less lucky, or do all escape? A syllogism: other men die; but I Am not another; therefore I'll not die. Space is a swarming in the eyes; and time, A singing in the ears. In this hive I'm Locked up. Yet, if prior to life we had Been able to imagine life, what mad, Impossible, unutterably weird, 220 Wonderful nonsense it might have appeared! So why join in the vulgar laughter? Why Scorn a hereafter none can verify: The Turk's delight, the future lyres, the talks With Socrates and Proust in cypress walks, The seraph with his six flamingo wings, And Flemish hells with porcupines and things? It isn't that we dream too wild a dream: The trouble is we do not make it seem Sufficiently unlikely; for the most 230 We can think up is a domestic ghost.
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