Lola Ridge: Jaguar
Lola Ridge
(1871-1941)
Jaguar
Nasal intonations of light
and clicking tongues …
publicity of windows
stoning me with pent-up cries …
smells of abattoirs …
smells of long-dead meat.
Some day-end–
while the sand is yet cozy as a blanket
off the warm body of a squaw,
and the jaguars are out to kill …
with a blue-black night coming on
and a painted cloud
stalking the first star–
I shall go alone into the Silence …
the coiled Silence …
where a cry can run only a little way
and waver and dwindle
and be lost.
And there …
where tiny antlers clinch and strain
as life grapples in a million avid points,
and threshing things,
strike and die,
letting their hate live on
in the spreading purple of a wound …
I too
will make covert of a crevice in the night,
and turn and watch …
nose at the cleft’s edge.
Lola Ridge poetry
kempis.nl poetry magazine
More in: Archive Q-R, Ridge, Lola