The Fugitive

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The Fugitive

I saw Thee following me,

I heard Thee calling me,

I even felt Thine arrows in my tears;

I know Thou art shadowing me,

And wilt yet, forestalling me,

Whip out the vanities of all my years.

I ran and still I run away from Thee

Through maze and mirage of mortality;⁠—

Over the hot sands and the frozen lakes,

Across the sable wilderness that breaks

In fragrant moors, I ran to hills of dreams,

Up to the secret borderland that gleams

Eternally, casting its shafts of light,

From every incommunicable height,

Upon the spinning feet of humankind.

O, how I leaped from peak to peak to find

The path to the azure dance-hall of the world,

Whose dome is gemmed, whose portals are empearled

With hearts that melt and crystallize and shine⁠—

With frozen music, frozen beads of wine⁠—

And whose laughter echoes through the spinning spheres,

Where we were taught to dance in former years.

Yea, I, who lit Thine altar, as a boy,

And nursed in incense fumes my vision of joy,

And like a roebuck leaped across the rills,

And danced like sparks of sunlight o’er the hills,

To be, at early morn and eventide,

The first of acolytes that served with pride

Thy venerable priests, alas! one day,

Casting my shame and piety aside,

I snuffed the candles out and walked away

Into the dazzling night of dance and song,

Into the temple of the merry throng.

And ever since, a fugitive from Thee,

Shod with Thy lightning, chuckling oft with glee,

Unburdened and unfettered and undaunted,

With naught, not e’en my shamelessness to hide,

And only by beguiling Beauty haunted,

I trod the path of demiurgic pride.

Yea, I was proud, when in the dawn’s desire

I could command the fruit of every tree,

The bloom of every garden, and the fire

Of every passion, every ecstasy

Upon my way. O pride of brawn and dare!

I’d shake the lustre from the stars and steal

The sap from the vines of June, and I would share

My booty with the comrade that would seal

His thieving faith with paeons to the deed

That knows nor law, nor moral code, nor creed.

I ran and still I run away from Thee,

Past pyramids and labyrinths of reason,

Through gleaming forests, where the upas tree

Feeds both the saint and sinner for a season.

And I danced in its lethal shades; I climbed

Up to the highest fruit-concealing bough

That bends beneath a mocking wing; I rhymed

My joy and pride; and o’er the very brow

Of Death I leaped into the howling void,

Where the acrobats of Mind, with balance-pole

Of Logic in their hands, are ever employed

In scanning the dark canyons of the Soul.

And I was proud when on the tight rope I

Essayed my feet and fixed my giddy brain

Upon the universe; whereat the sky

Was but a mute infinity of vain

Belief; and every mystery divine,

A sea-washed, iridescent hollow shell

Upon the sands of faith: yea, every sign

Upon the road led to an empty well.

And I was proud⁠—O pride of intellect!⁠—

That the nothingness of things I could detect.

I ran and still I run away from Thee,

Mistaking Thy compassion for Thine ire;⁠—

A rebel I, fantastically free,

A green-eyed flame of crepitating fire

Whipped by the winds of Circumstance, and yet

By Thee pursued and by Thy love beset.

And why?⁠—I oft pretend to know not why

This fond solicitude. For what am I

But a bubble of vanity, a human thing

Puffed with the vision of a loneliness

In which a pimpled Ego tries to sing

Of Self, alas! and spread its ebon wing.

But I remember still Thy first caress,

Which, in my infant vision I could feel

Even as the flowers, which Thy love reveal,

Even as the ocean in the Moon’s embrace,

Even as the sunrise that reflects Thy face.

And this remembering, I hailed the soul,

Flaunting the sacred symbol of the goal

That shrines Thine image; yea, and I was proud

That, rising over Self Thyself to find,

With Thine own godliness I was endowed,

And yet I am but partially resigned.⁠ ⁠…

O, spiritual pride! which would disguise

The hollow heart of Holier-than-thou

In accents borrowed from the meek and wise,

I, too, have prated with a placid brow,

Though I, still casting shadows in the mire,

Was but a scarecrow in the vineyard of desire.

I saw Thee following me,

I heard Thee calling me,

I even felt Thine arrows in my tears;

I know Thou art shadowing me,

And wilt yet, forestalling me,

Whip out the vanities of all my years.