Katherine Mansfield (Кэтрин Мэнсфилд)
Night-Scented Stock
White, white in the milky night The moon danced over a tree. ”Wouldn’t it be lovely to swim in the lake!” Someone whispered to me. ”Oh, do-do-do!” cooed someone else, And clasped her hands to her chin. ”I should so love to see the white bodies-- All the white bodies jump in!” The big dark house hid secretly Behind the magnolia and the spreading pear-tree; But there was a sound of music--music rippled and ran Like a lady laughing behind her fan, Laughing and mocking and running away... ”Come into the garden--it’s as light as day!” ”I can’t dance to that Hungarian stuff, The rhythm in it is not passionate enough,” Said somebody. ”I absolutely refuse....” But he took off his socks and his shoes And round he spun. ”It’s like Hungarian fruit dishes Hard and bright--a mechanical blue!” His white feet flicked in the grass like fishes... Someone cried: ”I want to dance, too!” But one with a queer Russian ballet head Curled up on a blue wooden bench instead. And another, shadowy--shadowy and tall-- Walked in the shadow of the dark house wall, Someone beside her. It shone in the gloom, His round grey hat, like a wet mushroom. ”Don’t you think perhaps...” piped someone’s flute. ”How sweet the flowers smell!” I heard the other say. Somebody picked a wet, wet pink, Smelled it and threw it away. ”Is the moon a virgin or is she a harlot?” Asked somebody. Nobody would tell. The faces and the hands moved in a pattern As the music rose and fell, In a dancing, mysterious, moon-bright pattern Like flowers nodding under the sea... The music stopped and there was nothing left of them But the moon dancing over the tree.
Katherine Mansfield’s other poems:
- The Town Between the Hills
- Song by the Window Before Bed
- Song of the Little White Girl
- The Arabian Shawl
- Villa Pauline
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