Saint, Revolutionist in
General
Saint, revolutionist,
God and sage know well,
That there is a place
Where that much-rung bell,
The well-beloved body,
And its sensitive face
Must be sacrificed.
There is, it seems, in this
A something meaningless,
Hanging without support
And yet too dear to touch,
That life should seek its end
Where no will can descend,
Facing a gun to see
Long actuality.
What is this that is
The good of nothingness,
The death of Socrates
And that strange man on the cross
Seeking out all loss?
For men love life until
It shames both face and will.
Neither in hell nor heaven
Is the answer given,
Both are a servant's pay:
But they wish to know
how far the will can go,
Lest their infinite play
And their desires be
Shadow and mockery.
By Delmore Schwartz
Tell Your Friends About It |
Print This Poem
Comments
You should be logged in to be able to leave comments
Other poems by Delmore Schwartz:
- A Dream Of Whitman Paraphrased, Recognized And Mad
- A Young Child And His Pregnant Mother
- Albert Einstein To Archibald Macleish
- America, America!
- Apollo Musagete, Poetry, And The Leader Of The Mus
- Archaic Bust Of Apollo
- At This Moment Of Time
- By Circumstances Fed
- Cambridge, Spring 1937
- Concerning The Synthetic Unity Of Apperception
- Far Rockaway
- Faust In Old Age
- For The One Who Would Not Take His Life In His Han
- From The Graveyard By The Sea
- From: A King Of Kings, A King Among The Kings
- In The Slight Ripple, The Mind Perceives The Heart
- Late Autumn In Venice
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
- News Of The Gold World Of May
- O Love, Sweet Animal
- Occasional Poems
- Out Of The Watercolored Window, When You Look
- Parlez-Vous Francais?
- Philology Recapitulates Ontology, Poetry Is Ontolo
- Phoenix Lyrics
- Poem (Faithful to your commands, o consciousness)
- Poem (In the morning, when it was raining)
- Poem (Old man in the crystal morning after snow)
- Poem (Remember midsummer: the fragrance of box)
- Poem (You, my photographer, you, most aware)
- Prothalamion
- Saint, Revolutionist
- Socrates Ghost Must Haunt Me Now
- Someone Is Harshly Coughing As Before
- Sonnet On Famous And Familiar Sonnets And Experien
- Sonnet Suggested By Homer, Chaucer, Shakespeare, E
- Sonnet: O City, City
- Sonnet: The Ghosts Of James And Peirce In Harvard
- Spiders
- The Ballad Of The Children Of The Czar
- The Ballet Of The Fifth Year
- The Beautiful American Word, Sure
- The First Night Of Fall And Falling Rain
- The Journey Of A Poem Compared To All The Sad Vari
- The Poet
- The Sin Of Hamlet
- The Spring
- Tired And Unhappy, You Think Of Houses
- To Helen
- What Curious Dresses All Men Wear
- What Is To Be Given
- Yeats Died Saturday In France
|