I. New York, it would be easy to revile The flatly carnal beggar in your smile, And flagellate, with a superior bliss, The gasping routines of your avarice. Loud men reward you with an obvious ax, Or piteous laurel-wreath, and their attacks And eulogies blend to a common sin. New York, perhaps an intellectual grin That brings its bright cohesion to the warm Confusion of the heart, can mould your swarm Of huge, drab blunders into smaller grace . . . With old words I shall gamble for your face. II. The evening kneels between your prisoned brick, Darkly indifferent to each scheme and trick With which your men insult and smudge their day. When evenings metaphysically pray Above the weakening dance of men, they find That every eye that looks at them is blind. And yet, New York, I say that evenings free An insolently mystic majesty From your parades of automatic greed. For one dark moment all your narrow speed Receives the fighting blackness of a soul, And every nervous lie swings to a whole -- A pilgrim, blurred yet proud, who finds in black An arrogance that fills his straining lack. Between your undistinguished crates of stone And wood, the wounded dwarfs who walked alone -- The chorus-girls whose indiscretions hang Between the sentinels of rouge and slang; The women molding painfully a fresh Reward for pliant treacheries of flesh; The men who raise the tin sword of a creed, Convinced that it can kill the lunge of greed; The thieves whose beaten vanity purloins A fancied victory from ringing coins; The staidly bloated men whose minds have sold Their quickness to an old, metallic Scold; The neatly cultured men whose hopes and fears Dwel in soft prisons honored by past years; The men whose tortured youth bends to the task Of fashioning a damply swaggering mask -- The night, with black hands, gathers each mistake And strokes a mystic freedom from each ache. The night, New York, sardonic and alert, Offers a soul to your reluctant dirt. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SONG:SO WHY DOES THIS DEAD CARNATION by HAYDEN CARRUTH A BIT OF SKY by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON BONDAGE by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON GOSSAMER by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON QUEST by GEORGIA DOUGLAS JOHNSON ODE TO THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY by SIDNEY LANIER THE DAY OF THE DEAD SOLDIERS; MARY 30, 1869 by EMMA LAZARUS |