Public Domain Poetry And Stories - William Marion Reedy by Edgar Lee Masters
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William Marion Reedy

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        He sits before you silent as Buddha,
        And then you say
        This man is Rabelais.
        And while you wonder what his stock is,
        English or Irish, you behold his eyes
        As big and brown as those desirable crockies
        With which as boys we used to play.
        And then you see the spherical light that lies
        Just under the iris coloring,
        Before which everything,
        Becomes as plain as day.

        If you have noticed the rolling jowls
        And the face that speaks its chief
        Delight in beer and roast beef
        Before you have seen his eyes, you see
        A man of fleshly jollity,
        Like the friars of old in gowns and cowls
        To make a show of scowls.
        And when he speaks from an orotund depth that growls
        In a humorous way like Fielding or Smollett
        That turns in a trice to Robert La Follette
        Or retraces to Thales of Crete,
        And touches upon Descartes coming back
        Through the intellectual Zodiac
        That's something of a feat.
        And you see that the eyes are really the man,
        For the thought of him proliferates
        This way over to Hindostan,
        And that way descanting on Yeats.
        With a word on Plato's symposium,
        And a little glimpse of Theocritus,
        Or something of Bruno's martyrdom,
        Or what St. Thomas Aquinas meant
        By a certain line obscure to us.
        And then he'll take up Horace's odes
        Or the Roman civilization;
        Or a few of the Iliad's episodes,
        Or the Greek deterioration.
        Or skip to a word on the plasmic jelly,
        Which Benjamin Moore and others think
        Is the origin of life. Then Shelley
        Comes in a for a look of understanding.
        Or he'll tell you about the orientation
        Of the ancient dream of Zion.
        Or what's the matter with Bryan.
        And while the porter is bringing a drink
        Something into his fancy skips
        And he talks about the Apocalypse,
        Or a painter or writer now unknown
        In France or Germany who will soon
        Have fame of him through the whole earth blown.

        It's not so hard a thing to be wise
        In the lore of books.
        It's a different thing to be all eyes,
        Like a lighthouse which revolves and looks
        Over the land and out to sea:
        And a lighthouse is what he seems to me!
        Sitting like Buddha spiritually cool,
        Young as the light of the sun is young,
        And taking the even with the odd
        As a matter of course, and the path he's trod
        As a path that was good enough.
        With a sort of transcendental sense
        Whose hatred is less than indifference,
        And a gift of wisdom in love.
        And who can say as he classifies
        Men and ages with his eyes
        With cool detachment: this is dung,
        And that poor fellow is just a fool.
        And say what you will death is a rod.
        But I see a light that shines and shines
        And I rather think it's God.



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