Vachel Lindsay (Вэчел Линдсей)

The Beggar’s Valentine


Kiss me and comfort my heart 
Maiden honest and fine. 
I am the pilgrim boy 
Lame, but hunting the shrine; 

Fleeing away from the sweets, 
Seeking the dust and rain, 
Sworn to the staff and road, 
Scorning pleasure and pain; 

Nevertheless my mouth 
Would rest like a bird an hour 
And find in your curls a nest 
And find in your breast a bower: 

Nevertheless my eyes 
Would lose themselves in your own, 
Rivers that seek the sea, 
Angels before the throne: 

Kiss me and comfort my heart, 
For love can never be mine: 
Passion, hunger and pain, 
These are the only wine 

Of the pilgrim bound to the road. 
He would rob no man of his own. 
Your heart is another’s I know, 
Your honor is his alone. 

The feasts of a long drawn love, 
The feasts of a wedded life, 
The harvests of patient years, 
And hearthstone and children and wife: 

These are your lords I know. 
These can never be mine — 
This is the price I pay 
For the foolish search for the shrine: 

This is the price I pay 
For the joy of my midnight prayers, 
Kneeling beneath the moon 
With hills for my altar stairs; 

This is the price I pay 
For the throb of the mystic wings, 
When the dove of God comes down 
And beats round my heart and sings; 

This is the price I pay 
For the light I shall some day see 
At the ends of the infinite earth 
When truth shall come to me. 

And what if my body die 
Before I meet the truth? 
The road is dear, more dear 
Than love or life or youth. 

The road, it is the road, 
Mystical, endless, kind, 
Mother of visions vast, 
Mother of soul and mind; 

Mother of all of me 
But the blood that cries for a mate — 
That cries for a farewell kiss 
From the child of God at the gate.

Vachel Lindsay’s other poems:

  1. The Potatoes’ Dance
  2. I Heard Immanuel Singing
  3. When Gassy Thompson Struck It Rich
  4. The Tree of Laughing Bells
  5. Where Is David, the Next King of Israel?

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