Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre. Voltairine De Cleyre

Selected Works of Voltairine de Cleyre - Voltairine De Cleyre


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Crashing and clapping

       The split night swings,

       And rocks and totters,

       Bled of its levin,

       And reels and mutters

       A curse to Heaven!

       Reels and mutters and rolls and dies,

       With a wild light streaking its black, blind eyes.

      Far, far, far,

       Through the red, mad morn,

       Like a hurtling star,

       Through the air upborne,

       The Herald-Singer,

       The Terror-Bringer,

       Speeds—and behind, through the cloud-rags torn,

       Gather and wheel a million wings,

       Clanging as iron where the hammer rings;

       The whipped sky shivers,

       The White Gate shakes,

       The ripped throne quivers,

       The dumb God wakes,

       And feels in his heart the talon-stings—

       The dead bodies hurled from beaks for slings.

       "Ruin! Ruin!" the Whirlwind cries,

       And it leaps at his throat and tears his eyes;

       "Death for death, as ye long have dealt;

       The heads of your victims your heads shall pelt;

       The blood ye wrung to get drunk upon,

       Drink, and be poisoned! On, Herald, on!"

      Behold, behold,

       How a moan is grown!

       A cry hurled high 'gainst a scaffold's joist!

       The Voice of Defiance—the loud, wild Voice!

       Whirled

       Through the world,

       A smoke-wreath curled

       (Breath 'round hot kisses) around a fire!

       See! the ground hisses

       With curses, and glisses

       With red-streaming blood-clots of long-frozen ire,

       Waked by the flying

       Wild voice as it passes;

       Groaning and crying,

       The surge of the masses

       Rolls and flashes

       With thunderous roar—

       Seams and lashes

       The livid shore—

       Seams and lashes and crunches and beats,

       And drags a ragged wall to its howling retreats!

      Swift, swift, swift,

       'Thwart the blood-rain's fall,

       Through the fire-shot rift

       Of the broken wall,

       The prophet-crying

       The storm-strong sighing,

       Flies—and from under Night's lifted pall,

       Swarming, menace ten million darts,

       Uplifting fragments of human shards!

      Ah, white teeth chatter,

       And dumb jaws fall,

       While winged fires scatter

       Till gloom gulfs all

       Save the boom of the cannon that storm the forts

       That the people bombard with their comrades' hearts;

       "Vengeance! Vengeance!" the voices scream,

       And the vulture pinions whirl and stream!

       "Knife for knife, as ye long have dealt;

       The edge ye whetted for us be felt,

       Ye chopper of necks, on your own, your own!

       Bare it, Coward! On, Prophet, on!"

      Behold how high

       Rolls a prison cry!

      Philadelphia, August 1894.

       Table of Contents

      (Of all the stupidities wherewith the law-making power has signaled its own incapacity for dealing with the disorders of society, none appears so utterly stupid as the law which punishes an attempted suicide. To the question "What have you to say in your defense?" I conceive the poor wretch might reply as follows:)

      To say in my defense? Defense of what?

       Defense to whom? And why defense at all?

       Have I wronged any? Let that one accuse!

       Some priest there mutters I "have outraged God"!

       Let God then try me, and let none dare judge

       Himself as fit to put Heaven's ermine on!

       Again I say, let the wronged one accuse.

       Aye, silence! There is none to answer me.

       And whom could I, a homeless, friendless tramp,

       To whom all doors are shut, all hearts are locked,

       All hands withheld—whom could I wrong, indeed

       By taking that which benefited none

       And menaced all?

       Aye, since ye will it so,

       Know then your risk. But mark, 'tis not defense,

       'Tis accusation that I hurl at you.

       See to't that ye prepare your own defense.

       My life, I say, is an eternal threat

       To you and yours; and therefore it were well

       To have foreborne your unasked services.

       And why? Because I hate you! Every drop

       Of blood that circles in your plethoric veins

       Was wrung from out the gaunt and sapless trunks

       Of men like me, who in your cursed mills

       Were crushed like grapes within the wine-press ground.

       To us ye leave the empty skin of life;

       The heart of it, the sweet of it, ye pour

       To fete your dogs and mistresses withal!

       Your mistresses! Our daughters! Bought, for bread,

       To grace the flesh that once was father's arms!

      Yes, I accuse you that ye murdered me!

       Ye killed the Man—and this that speaks to you

       Is but the beast that ye have made of me!

       What! Is it life to creep and crawl and beg,

       And slink for shelter where rats congregate?

       And for one's ideal dream of a fat meal?

       Is it, then, life, to group like pigs in sties,

       And bury decency in common filth,

       Because, forsooth, your income must be made,

       Though human flesh rot in your plague-rid dens?

       Is it, then, life, to wait another's nod,

       For leave to turn yourself to gold for him?

       Would it be life to you? And was I less

       Than you? Was I not born with hopes and dreams

       And pains and passions even as were you?

      But


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