The Men That Are Falling

God and all angels sing the world to sleep,
Now that the moon is rising in the heat

And crickets are loud again in the grass.
The moon
Burns in the mind on lost remembrances.


He lies down and the night wind blows upon him
here.

The bells grow longer. This is not sleep. This is
desire.


Ah! Yes, desire . . . this leaning on his bed,
This leaning on his elbows on his bed,

Staring, at midnight, at the pillow that is
black the catastrophic room . . . beyond despair,

Like an intenser instinct. What is it he desires?
But this he cannot know, the man that thinks,

Yet life itself, the fulfilment of desire
In the grinding ric-rac, staring steadily

At a head upon the pillow in the dark,

More than sudarium, speaking the speech

Of absolutes, bodiless, a head
Thick-lipped from riot and rebellious cries,


The head of one of the men that are falling, placed
Upon the pillow to repose and speak,

Speak and say the immaculate syllables
That he spoke only by doing what he did.

God and all angels, this was his desire,
Whose head lies blurring here, for this he died.

Taste of the blood upon his martyred lips,
0 pensioners, 0 demagogues and pay-men!


This death was his belief though death is a stone.
This man loved earth, not heaven, enough to die
.

The night wind blows upon the dreamer, bent
Over words that are life's voluble utterance.