Public Domain Poetry And Stories - St. Francis And Lady Clare by Edgar Lee Masters
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St. Francis And Lady Clare

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        Antonio loved the Lady Clare.
        He caught her to him on the stair
        And pressed her breasts and kissed her hair,
        And drew her lips in his, and drew
        Her soul out like a torch's flare.
        Her breath came quick, her blood swirled round;
        Her senses in a vortex swound.
        She tore him loose and turned around,
        And reached her chamber in a bound
        Her cheeks turned to a poppy's hue.

        She closed the door and turned the lock,
        Her breasts and flesh were turned to rock.
        She reeled as drunken from the shock.
        Before her eyes the devils skipped,
        She thought she heard the devils mock.
        For had her soul not been as pure
        As sifted snow, could she endure
        Antonio's passion and be sure
        Against his passion's strength and lure?
        Lean fears along her wonder slipped.

        Outside she heard a drunkard call,
        She heard a beggar against the wall
        Shaking his cup, a harlot's squall
        Struck through the riot like a sword,
        And gashed the midnight's festival.
        She watched the city through the pane,
        The old Silenus half insane,
        The idiot crowd that drags its chain -
        And then she heard the bells again,
        And heard the voices with the word:

        Ecco il santo! Up the street
        There was the sound of running feet
        From closing door and window seat,
        And all the crowd turned on its way
        The Saint of Poverty to greet.
        He passed. And then a circling thrill,
        As water troubled which was still,
        Went through her body like a chill,
        Who of Antonio thought until
        She heard the Saint begin to pray.

        And then she turned into the room
        Her soul was cloven through with doom,
        Treading the softness and the gloom
        Of Asia's silk and Persia's wool,
        And China's magical perfume.
        She sickened from the vases hued
        In corals, yellows, greens, the lewd
        Twined dragon shapes and figures nude,
        And tapestries that showed a brood
        Of leopards by a pool!

        Candles of wax she lit before
        A pier glass standing from the floor;
        Up to the ceiling, off she tore
        With eager hands her jewels, then
        The silken vesture which she wore.
        Her little breasts so round to see
        Were budded like the peony.
        Her arms were white as ivory,
        And all her sunny hair lay free
        As marigold or celandine.

        Her blue eyes sparkled like a vase
        Of crackled turquoise, in her face
        Was memory of the mad embrace
        Antonio gave her on the stair,
        And on her cheeks a salt tear's trace.
        Like pigeon blood her lips were red.
        She clasped her bands above her head.
        Under her arms the waxlight shed
        Delicate halos where was spread
        The downy growth of hair.

        Such sudden sin the virgin knew
        She quenched the tapers as she blew
        Puff! puff! upon them, then she threw
        Herself in tears upon her knees,
        And round her couch the curtain drew.
        She called upon St. Francis' name,
        Feeling Antonio's passion maim
        Her body with his passion's flame
        To save her, save her from the shame
        Of fancies such as these!

        "Go by mad life and old pursuits,
        The wine cup and the golden fruits,
        The gilded mirrors, rosewood flutes,
        I would praise God forevermore
        With harps of gold and silver lutes."
        She stripped the velvet from her couch
        Her broken spirit to avouch.
        She saw the devils slink and slouch,
        And passion like a leopard crouch
        Half mirrored on the polished floor.

        Next day she found the saint and said:
        I would be God's bride, I would wed
        Poverty and I would eat the bread
        That you for anchorites prepare,
        For my soul's sake I am in dread.
        Go then, said Francis, nothing loth,
        Put off this gown of green snake cloth,
        Put on one somber as a moth,
        Then come to me and make your troth
        And I will clip your golden hair.

        She went and came. But still there lay,
        A gem she did not put away,
        A locket twixt her breasts, all gay
        In shimmering pearls and tints of blue,
        And inlay work of fruit and spray.
        St. Francis felt it as he slipped
        His hand across her breast and whipped
        Her golden tresses ere he clipped -
        He closed his eyes then as he gripped
        The shears, plunged the shears through.

        The waterfall of living gold.
        The locks fell to the floor and rolled,
        And curled like serpents which unfold.
        And there sat Lady Clare despoiled.
        Of worldly glory manifold.
        She thrilled to feel him take and hide
        The locket from her breast, a tide
        Of passion caught them side by side.
        He was the bridegroom, she the bride -
        Their flesh but not their spirits foiled.

        Thus was the Lady Clare debased
        To sack cloth and around her waist
        A rope the jeweled belt replaced.
        Her feet made free of silken hose
        Naked in wooden sandals cased
        Went bruised to Bastia's chapel, then
        They housed her in St. Damian
        And here she prayed for poor women
        And here St. Francis sought her when
        His faith sank under earthly woes.

        Antonio cursed St. Clare in rhyme
        And took to wine and got the lime
        Of hatred on his soul, in time
        Grew healed though left a little lame,
        And laughed about it in his prime;
        When he could see with crystal eyes
        That love is a winged thing which flies;
        Some break the wings, some let them rise
        From earth like God's dove to the skies
        Diffused in heavenly flame.



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