Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.
Cave TalkJoseph Warren Beach
W
I mean to follow the sun across
To islands far remote.
It may be I shall find a land
Where fruits and spices grow;
Fairer women, stronger men,
And mountains topped with snow.
Where ghosts and monsters be.
What fairer folk can heart desire
Than my sweet cubs and me?
And who shall bring us fish and flesh
When you are gone away?
Come, spread the net and string the bow—
But fare not far astray!
Feathered bird and otter furred,
To bide for many a year.
When a thousand moons have waxed and waned
And I am dust and smoke,
Men shall behold my handiwork
And praise the master-stroke.
Behold our bitter dearth!
We shiver in the frosty wind
And couch upon the earth.
Go, strip the otter and her cubs
For coats and kirtles fine,
And pluck the feathered bird to strew
A bed for me and mine.
And wonder if they are the souls
Of such as you and I;
And if the bear and the lean gray wolf
Have souls like yours and mine,
That go to feed the milky way
Or make the great stars shine.
And the souls of wolf and bear?
The gray wolf prowls about the rock
And sniffs upon the air;
His eyes are shining in the dark
Like stars above the sea!
Build high the fire before the cave
To guard my cubs and me.
And breasts and shoulders smooth and round
And soft in the flickering light.
I muse how wondrous women are
And how unlike to men …
I saw white arms in the sea at dawn …
Long since … and never again …
Who talk of women and men,
Of white arms in the sea at dawn …
You love me never again!
You sit and dream the while I wait—
And the little ones all asleep …
Oh, if you love me a little, man,
Kiss me … or I shall weep!