The Two Titans

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The Two Titans

A Political Poem

The vision of a rock where lightnings whirl’d

Bruising the darkness with their crackling light;

The waves, enormous wanderers of the world,

Beat on it with their hammers day and night.

Two figures crouching on the black rock, bound

To one another with a coiling chain;

A grey-haired youth, whose cheeks had never found,

Or long ere this had lost their ruddy stain;

A sibyl, with fierce face as of a hound

That dreams. She moveth, feeling in her brain

The lightnings pulse⁠—behold her, aye behold⁠—

Ignoble joy, and more ignoble pain

Cramm’d all her youth; and hates have bought and sold

Her spirit. As she moves, the foam-globes burst

Over her spotted flesh and flying hair

And her gigantic limbs. The weary thirst

Unquenchable still glows in her dull stare,

As round her, slow on feet that have no blood,

The phantoms of her faded pleasures walk;

And trailing crimson vans, a mumbling brood,

Ghosts of her vanished glories, muse and stalk

About the sea. Before her lies that youth,

Worn with long struggles; and the waves have sung

Their passion and their restlessness and ruth

Through his sad soul for ever old and young,

Till their fierce miseries within his eyes

Have lit lone tapers.

Now the night was cast,

Making all one o’er rock and sea and skies;

And when once more the lightning Genii passed,

Strewing upon the rocks their steel-blue hair,

I saw him stagger with the clanking chain,

Trailing and shining ’neath the flickering glare.

With little cries of joy he kissed the rain

In creviced rocks, and laughed to the old sea,

And, nodding to and fro, sang songs of love,

And flowers and little children. Suddenly

Dropt down the velvet darkness from above,

Hiding away the ocean’s yelping flocks.

When flash on flash once more the lightning came,

The youth had flung his arms around the rocks,

And in the sibyl’s eyes a languid flame

Was moving. Bleeding now, his grasp unlocks,

And he is dragged again before her feet.

Why not? He is her own; and crouching nigh

Bending her face o’er his, she watches meet

And part his foaming mouth with eager eye⁠—

To place a kiss of fire on the dim brow

Of Failure, and to crown her crownless head,

That all men evermore may humbly bow

Down to the mother of the foiled and dead.

For this did the Eternal Darkness bring

Thither thy dust, and knead it with a cry,

Gathered on her own lips, Oh youth, and fling

Failure for glory down on thee, and mould

Thy withered foe, and with the purple wing

Of ocean fan thee into life, and fold

For ever round thy waking and thy sleep

The darkness of the whirlwind shattered deep.