SUITE I.I have discovered that most ofthe beauties of travel are due to the strange hours we keep to see them: the domes of the Church of the Paulist Fathers in Weehawken are beautiful as Saint Peters approached after years of anticipation. II.Though the operation was postponedI saw the tall probationers in their tan uniforms hurrying to breakfast! III.—and from basement entrysneatly coiffed, middle aged gentlemen with orderly moustaches and well brushed coats VI.—and a semicircle of dirt colored menabout a fire bursting from an old ash can, VII.—and the worn,blue car rails (like the sky!) gleaming among the cobbles! VIII.—and the rickety ferry-boat “Arden”!What an object to be called “Arden” among the great piers,—on the ever new river! “Put me a Touchstone at the wheel, white gulls, and we’ll follow the ghost of the Half Moon to the North West Passage—and through! (at Albany!) for all that!” IX.Exquisite brown waves—longcirclets of silver moving over you! enough with crumbling ice-crusts among you! The sky has come down to you, lighter than tiny bubbles, face to His spirit is a white gull with delicate pink feet and a snowy breast for you to hold to your lips delicately! X.The young doctor is dancing with happinessin the sparkling wind, alone at the prow of the ferry! He notices the curdy barnacles and broken ice crusts left at the slip’s base by the low tide and thinks of summer and green shell crusted ledges among the emerald eel-grass! XI.Who knows the Palisades as I doknows the river breaks east from them above the city—but they continue south —under the sky—to bear a crest of little peering houses that brighten with dawn behind the moody water-loving giants of Manhattan. XII.Long yellow rushes bendingabove the white snow patches; purple and gold ribbon what an angle you make with each other as you lie there in contemplation. XIII.Work hard all your young daysand they’ll find you too, some morning staring up under your chiffonier at its warped bass-wood bottom and your soul— out! —among the little sparrows behind the shutter. XIV.—and the flapping flags are athalf mast for the dead admiral. XV.All this—was for you, old woman. I wanted to write a poem that you would understand. For what good is it to me if you can’t understand it? But you got to try hard— But— Well, you know how the young girls run giggling when they ought to be home in bed? Well, that’s the way it is with me somehow. |