| THE TREES in trouble because of autumn, | |
| And scarlet berries falling from the bush, | |
| And all the myriad houseless seeds | |
| Loosing hold in the winds insistent push | |
| |
| Moan softly with autumnal parturition, | 5 |
| Poor, obscure fruits extruded out of light | |
| Into the world of shadow, carried down | |
| Between the bitter knees of the after-night. | |
| |
| Bushed in an uncouth ardour, coiled at core | |
| With a knot of life that only bliss can unravel, | 10 |
| Fall all the fruits most bitterly into earth | |
| Bitterly into corrosion bitterly travel. | |
| |
| What is it internecine that is locked, | |
| By very fierceness into a quiescence | |
| Within the rage? We shall not know till it burst | 15 |
| Out of corrosion into new florescence. | |
| |
| Nay, but how tortured is the frightful seed | |
| The spark intense within it, all without | |
| Mordant corrosion gnashing and champing hard | |
| For ruin on the naked small redoubt. | 20 |
| |
| Bitter, to fold the issue, and make no sally; | |
| To have the mystery, but not go forth; | |
| To bear, but retaliate nothing, given to save | |
| The spark in storms of corrosion, as seeds from the north. | |
| |
| The sharper, more horrid the pressure, the harder the heart | 25 |
| That saves the blue grain of eternal fire | |
| Within its quick, committed to hold and wait | |
| And suffer unheeding, only forbidden to expire. | |