I. After peace
The city thrills once more to
joyous singing;
Glad laughter sounds again upon the street,
And music throbs again, until young feet
Trip merrily upon their way; the ringing
Of hour chimes are gallant voices, flinging
Their challenges through each crowded space,
to
greet
Old friends who linger where they used to
meet
With other friends long gone.... The summer,
bringing
The light of peace, has seemed
to fill the city,
With happiness that echoes far and wide
In sounds of joy; there seems no room for
sorrow
Yet, like a minor chord submersed in pity,
There steals above the music of tomorrow,
The weary footsteps of the ones who died.
II. THE RUE DE LA PAIX(A STREET OF JEWELS)
The windows glow with many jewels,
with rubies
fire-entangled,
And glowing bits of emerald, and diamonds
like
the dew
But, Paris, can you quite forget the bodies lying
mangled
Beneath the snow on Flanders fieldsyour
lost
who call to you?).
The windows of each little shop
are gay with gem-
like laughter,
With rings to fit milady’s hand, and
drops to deck
her ear;
(But, Paris, can you quite forget Verdun, and
Ypres,
andafter?
And, far beneath the sounds of mirth, one
wonders what you hear.)
The windows glow with countless
jewels, the shop-
girls stop to wonder,
The little shopgirls who are still, so many,
dressed
in black
(But, oh, the saddened hearts of them no doubt
are
lying under
Some sandy stretch along the Marne, where
grim
defeat turned back!)
The windows gleam enticingly,
and eyes light up to
see them,
For Paris thrills to loveliness, as Paris
always
thrilled
(Oh, God of beauty, touch the lives that war
has
crushed, and free them
From broken dreams, an empty faith, and hopes
forever stilled!)
III. THE FLOWER WAGONS
Violets and mignonette, crowded
close together,
Crowded close together on the corner of each
street,
Through the chilling dampness of the misty weather,
Violets and mignonetteah, so close
together
Making all the Paris day colorful and sweet!
Roses faintly touched with pink;
see, a soldier
lingers
Close beside the flower-stand, dreaming of
the day
When she broke a single bud with her slender
fingers,
Pressed it to her wistful mouthsee,
a soldier lingers
Dreaming of a summertime very far away.
Lilacs white and pure and new,
fragrant as the
morning
One pale widow, passing by, pauses for a space,
Thinking of the lilac tree that once grew, adorning
All a little cottage home, in life’s fragrant
morning;
Of a lilac tree that grew in a garden place.
Pansies for a thought of love,
lilies for love’s sorrow,
Bay leaves green as hopes that live, berries
red
and brown;
Flowers vivid for a day, gone upon the morrow,
Flowers that are sweet as faith, that are sad
as
sorrow
Flowers for the weary souls of a weary town.
Violets and mignonette, crowded
close together,
Crowded close together on the corner of each
street;
Singing of the summertime, through the misty
weather,
Violets and mignonetteah, so close
together
Making all the Paris day colorful and sweet!
IV. Across the years
(Marie Antoinette walked down
the steps of a certain
Chapel on her way to the guillotine.)
They say a queen once walked along
the marble steps
with grace,
To meet grim death by guillotinea
smile was on
her face,
A smile of scorn that lifted her above the howling
crowd,
A smile that mocked at pallid feara
smile serene
and proud.
Yes, it was Marie Antoinetteshe
walked with
steady
tread,
She sauntered down the
marble steps with proudly
lifted
head;
And there were those
among the crowd who watched
with
indrawn breath,
To see a queen walk
out with smiles to keep a tryst
with
death!
I stood beside those
marble steps just yesterday, and
saw,
A bride upon a soldier’s
arma poilu brave who
wore
A Croix de
Guerre upon his breastand oh, they
smiled
above
The busy throng that
hurried by, unconscious of their
love.
And though, across the
mist of years, I glimpsed a
fair
queen’s face,
A face that smiled,
but scornfully, above her land’s
disgrace
I will remember, on
those steps, the little new-made
wife,
Who came, her eyes all
filled with trust, to keep
her
tryst with life.
V. Sunlight
The sun shines over
Paris fitfully,
As
if it really were afraid to shine;
And
clouds of gray mist curl and twist and twine
Across the sky.
As far as one can see
The streets are wet
with rain, and suddenly
New
rain falls in a straight, relentless line
And
silver drops, like needles, slim and fine,
Drip from the branches
of each gaunt-limbed tree.
Ah, Paris, can the very
wistful sky
Look
down into the center of your heart,
That
has been bruised by war, and torn apart
The once glad heart
that has been taught to sigh?
The sun is like your
smile that flutters by
Like
some lost dream, before the tear-drops start.
VI. The Latin quarterafter
They were the brave ones, the
gallant ones, the
laughing ones,
Who were the very first to goto
heed their coun-
try’s call;
They were the joyous ones, the carefree ones,
the
chaffing ones,
Who were the first to meet the foe, who were
the
first to fall.
Artists and poets, they; the talented
and youthful
ones
All the world before their feet, their feet
that loved
to stray;
We have heard about their lives; stories crude,
and
truthful ones
Of the carefree lives they lived, in the yesterday.
Ah, the Latin Quarter now; boarded
up, the most
of it,
Studios are bare, this year, and little models
sigh,
For the ones who died for France, died and are
the
boast of it,
Died as they had always lived, with their
heads
held high!
But a spark of it remains, in
forgotten places,
For I saw a blinded boy strumming a guitar,
Playing with his face a-smile, with the arts
and
graces
Of a troubadour of old. He had wandered
far.
Through the flaming hell of warwandered
far and
home again,
To the corner that he loved when his eyes
could
see;
And he played a jolly tune, he who may not roam
again,
Played it on an old guitarplayed
it smilingly.
And I saw another sit at a tiny
table,
In a dingy eating house; he had laughed and
drawn
Sketches on the ragged cloth, boasting he was
able
Still to draw as well as mostwith
two fingers
gone....
VII. Notre Dame
Through colored glass, on burnished
walls,
Soft as a psalm, the sunlight falls;
And, in the corners, cool and dim,
Its glow is like a vesper hymn.
And, arch by arch, the ceilings high
Rise like a hand stretched toward the sky
To touch God’s hand. On every side
Is misty silence; and the wide
Untroubled spaces seem to tell
That Peace is comeand all is well!
A slender woman kneels
in prayer;
The sunlight slants
across her hair;
A pallid child in rusty
black
Stands in the doorway,
looking back....
A poilu gropes (his
eyes are wide)
Along the altar rail.
The tide
Of war has cast him
brokenly
Upon the shore of life.
I see
A girl in costly furs,
who cries
Against her muff; I
see her rise
And hurry out.
Two tourists pause
Beside the grated chancel
doors,
To wonder and to speculate;
To stoop and read a
carven date.
In uniform the nations come;
Their voices are a steady hum
Until they feel some subtle thrill
That makes them falter, holds them still
Bronzed boys, who shrugged and laughed at death,
They stand today with indrawn breath,
Half mystified.
The colors steal
Into my heart, and I can feel
The rapture that the artists knew
Who, centuries before me, drew
Their very souls into the glass
Of every window..... Hours pass
Like beads of amber that are strung
Upon a rainbow, frail and young.
Through mellow glass, on hallowed walls,
The twilight, like faint music, falls;
And in each corner, cool and dim,
The music is a splendid hymn.
And, arch on arch, the ceilings high
Seem like a hand stretched toward the sky
To touch a Hand that clasped a Cross
for France, new-Risen from the loss,
and pain and fear of battle-hell,
knows peace, at least, and all is well!
VIII. Sunday morning
The streets are silent,
and the church bells ring
Across
the city like the silver chime
Of some forgotten memory.
They bring
The
phantom of another, sweeter time,
When war was all undreamed.
They seem to say,
“Come
back, come back, across the years of strife
“To One who reaches
out a Hand today,
“A
Hand that brings your dead again to life!”
A little white-haired
woman hurries past,
A
tiny prayer-book in one wrinkled hand;
Her eyes are calm, as
one who knows at last
What
only age may really understand;
That, as a rainbow creeps
across the rain,
The God of Paris smiles
above its pain!