Aubade
Dame Edith Sitwell
Jane, Jane, Tall as a crane, The morning light creaks down again; Comb your cockscomb-ragged hair, Jane, Jane, come down the stair. Each dull blunt wooden stalactite Of rain creaks, hardened by the light, Sounding like an overtone From some lonely world unknown. But the creaking empty light Will never harden into sight, Will never penetrate your brain With overtones like the blunt rain. The light would show (if it could harden) Eternities of kitchen garden, Cockscomb flowers that none will pluck, And wooden flowers that ‘gin to cluck. In the kitchen you must light Flames as staring, red and white, As carrots or as turnips shining Where the cold dawn light lies whining. Cockscomb hair on the cold wind Hangs limp, turns the milk’s weak mind… Jane, Jane, Tall as a crane, The morning light creaks down again!
Next 10 Poems
- Dame Edith Sitwell : Bells Of Gray Crystal
- Dame Edith Sitwell : By The Lake
- Dame Edith Sitwell : Came The Great Popinjay
- Dame Edith Sitwell : Clowns' Houses
- Dame Edith Sitwell : Four In The Morning
- Dame Edith Sitwell : Interlude
- Dame Edith Sitwell : Still Falls The Rain
- Dame Edith Sitwell : The Fan
- Dame Edith Sitwell : The Web Of Eros
- Dame Edith Sitwell : When Cold December
Previous 10 Poems
- Dame Edith Sitwell : Answers
- Sir Philip Sidney : You Gote-heard Gods
- Sir Philip Sidney : Wooing-stuff
- Sir Philip Sidney : When Love Puffed Up With Rage Of High Disdain
- Sir Philip Sidney : Voices At The Window
- Sir Philip Sidney : Virtue, Beauty, And Speech, Did Strike, Wound, Charm
- Sir Philip Sidney : Verses ( No, No, No, No )
- Sir Philip Sidney : Verses
- Sir Philip Sidney : Two Pastorals
- Sir Philip Sidney : Translation From Horace, Book Ii. Ode X., Beginning 'rectius Vives, Licini,' &c.