
The Wind Bloweth Where It Listeth
“LIVE like the wind,” he said, “unfettered,And love me while you can;And when you will, and can be bettered, Go to the better man.
“For you’ll grow weary, maybe, sleeping So long a time with me;Like this there’ll be no cause for weeping; The wind is always free.
“Go when you please,” he would be saying, His mouth hard on her own;That’s why she stayed and loved the staying, Contented to the bone.
And now he’s dust, and he but twenty,— Frost that was like a flame;Her kisses on the head death bent, he Gave answer to his name.
And now he’s dust and with dust lying In sullen arrogance;
Death found it hard, for all his trying, To shatter such a lance.
She laid him out as fine as any That had a priest and ring;She never spared a silver penny For cost of anything.
Her grief is crowned with his child sucking The milk of her distress,As if his father’s hands were plucking Her buds of bitterness.
He may grow tall as any other, Blest with his father’s face,And yield her strength enough to smother What some will call disgrace.
He may be cursed and be concerned With thoughts of right and wrong,And brand with “Shame” these two that burned Without the legal thong.
Her man would say they were no rabble To love like common clay,— But Christian tongues are trained to babble In such a bitter way.
Still, she’s this minted gold to pour her, This from her man for a mark:It was no law that held him for her, And moved his feet in the dark.
