Title:   Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Subject:  

Author:   Amy Lowell, DH Lawrence, HD, etc

Keywords:  

Creator:  

PDF Version:   1.2



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Bookmarks





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Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Amy Lowell, DH Lawrence, HD, etc



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Page No 2


Table of Contents

Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology...................................................................................................................1

Amy Lowell, DH Lawrence, HD, etc......................................................................................................1

Richard Aldington .................................................................................................................................................2

Childhood .................................................................................................................................................2

The Poplar ................................................................................................................................................5

RoundPond............................................................................................................................................6

Daisy........................................................................................................................................................6

Epigrams..................................................................................................................................................7

The Faun Sees Snow for the First Time ...................................................................................................7

Lemures ....................................................................................................................................................8

H.D. .......................................................................................................................................................................8

The Pool ...................................................................................................................................................9

The Garden ...............................................................................................................................................9

Sea Lily..................................................................................................................................................10

Sea Iris...................................................................................................................................................10

Sea Rose .................................................................................................................................................11

Oread ......................................................................................................................................................11

Orion Dead .............................................................................................................................................12

John Gould Fletcher ............................................................................................................................................13

The Blue Symphony..............................................................................................................................13

London Excursion ..................................................................................................................................16

F.S. Flint ..............................................................................................................................................................21

Trees .......................................................................................................................................................21

Lunch.....................................................................................................................................................22

Malady...................................................................................................................................................22

Accident.................................................................................................................................................23

Fragment................................................................................................................................................24

Houses ....................................................................................................................................................25

EauForte ...............................................................................................................................................25

D.H. Lawrence....................................................................................................................................................25

Ballad of Another Ophelia .....................................................................................................................26

Illicit .......................................................................................................................................................27

Fireflies in the Corn...............................................................................................................................27

A Woman and Her Dead Husband .........................................................................................................28

The Mowers...........................................................................................................................................29

Scent of Irises .........................................................................................................................................30

Green ......................................................................................................................................................31

Amy Lowell........................................................................................................................................................31

Venus Transiens .....................................................................................................................................31

The Travelling Bear...............................................................................................................................32

The Letter ...............................................................................................................................................32

Grotesque...............................................................................................................................................33

Bullion...................................................................................................................................................33

Solitaire ..................................................................................................................................................34

The Bombardment.................................................................................................................................34


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

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Page No 3


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Amy Lowell, DH Lawrence, HD, etc

Richard Aldington  

Childhood 

The Poplar 

RoundPond 

Daisy 

Epigrams 

The Faun Sees Snow for the First Time 

Lemures  

H.D.  

The Pool 

The Garden 

Sea Lily 

Sea Iris 

Sea Rose 

Oread 

Orion Dead  

John Gould Fletcher  

The Blue Symphony 

London Excursion  

F.S. Flint  

Trees 

Lunch 

Malady 

Accident 

Fragment 

Houses 

EauForte  

D.H. Lawrence  

Ballad of Another Ophelia 

Illicit 

Fireflies in the Corn 

A Woman and Her Dead Husband 

The Mowers 

Scent of Irises 

Green  

Amy Lowell  

Venus Transiens 

The Travelling Bear 

The Letter 

Grotesque 

Bullion 

Solitaire 

The Bombardment  

Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology 1



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Page No 4


Richard Aldington

Childhood

THE bitterness. the misery, the wretchedness of childhood 

Put me out of love with God. 

I can't believe in God's goodness; 

I can believe 

In many avenging gods. 

Most of all I believe 

In gods of bitter dullness, 

Cruel local gods 

Who scared my childhood. 

II 

I've seen people put 

A chrysalis in a matchbox, 

"To see," they told me, "what sort of moth would come." 

But when it broke its shell 

It slipped and stumbled and fell about its prison 

And tried to climb to the light 

For space to dry its wings. 

That's how I was. 

Somebody found my chrysalis 

And shut it in a matchbox. 

My shrivelled wings were beaten, 

Shed their colours in dusty scales 

Before the box was opened 

For the moth to fly. 

III 

I hate that town; 

I hate the town I lived in when I was little; 

I hate to think of it. 

There wre always clouds, smoke, rain 

In that dingly little valley. 

It rained; it always rained. 

I think I never saw the sun until I was nine  

And then it was too late; 

Everything's too late after the first seven years. 

The long street we lived in 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Richard Aldington 2



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Page No 5


Was duller than a drain 

And nearly as dingy. 

There were the big College 

And the pseudoGothic townhall. 

There were the sordid provincial shops  

The grocer's, and the shops for women, 

The shop where I bought transfers, 

And the piano and gramaphone shop 

Where I used to stand 

Staring at the huge shiny pianos and at the pictures 

Of a white dog looking into a gramaphone. 

How dull and greasy and grey and sordid it was! 

On wet days  it was always wet  

I used to kneel on a chair 

And look at it from the window. 

The dirty yellow trams 

Dragged noisily along 

With a clatter of wheels and bells 

And a humming of wires overhead. 

They threw up the filthy rainwater from the hollow lines 

And then the water ran back 

Full of brownish foam bubbles. 

There was nothing else to see  

It was all so dull  

Except a few grey legs under shiny black umbrellas 

Running along the grey shiny pavements; 

Sometimes there was a waggon 

Whose horses made a strange loud hollow sound 

With their hoofs 

Through the silent rain. 

And there was a grey museum 

Full of dead birds and dead insects and dead animals 

And a few relics of the Romans  dead also. 

There was a seafront, 

A long asphalt walk with a bleak road beside it, 

Three piers, a row of houses, 

And a salt dirty smell from the little harbour. 

I was like a moth  

Like one of those grey Emperor moths 

Which flutter through the vines at Capri. 

And that damned little town was my matchbox, 

Against whose sides I beat and beat 

Until my wings were torn and faded, and dingy 

As that damned little town. 

IV 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Richard Aldington 3



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Page No 6


At school it was just as dull as that dull High Street. 

The front was dull; 

The High Street and the other street were dull  

And there was a public park, I remember, 

And that was damned dull, too, 

With its beds of geraniums no one was allowed to pick, 

And its clipped lawns you weren't allowed to walk on, 

And the goldfish pond you mustn't paddle in, 

And the gate made out of a whale's jawbones, 

And the swings, which were for "BoardSchool children," 

And its gravel paths. 

And on Sundays they rang the bells, 

From Baptist and Evangelical and Catholic churches. 

They had a Salvation Army. 

I was taken to a High Church; 

The parson's name was Mowbray, 

"Which is a good name but he thinks too much of it " 

That's what I heard people say. 

I took a little black book 

To that cold, grey, damp, smelling church, 

And I had to sit on a hard bench, 

Wriggle off it to kneel down when they sang psalms 

And wriggle off it to kneel down when they prayed, 

And then there was nothing to do 

Except to play trains with the hymnbooks. 

There was nothing to see, 

Nothing to do, 

Nothing to play with, 

Except that in an empty room upstairs 

There was a large tin box 

Containing reproductions of the Magna Charta, 

Of the Declaration of Independence 

And of a letter from Raleigh after the Armada. 

There were also several packets of stamps, 

Yellow and blue Guatemala parrots, 

Blue stags and red baboons and birds from Sarawak, 

Indians and Menofwar 

From the United States, 

And the green and red portraits 

Of King Francobello 

Of Italy. 

I don't believe in God. 

I do believe in avenging gods 

Who plague us for sins we never sinned 

But who avenge us. 


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Richard Aldington 4



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Page No 7


That's why I'll never have a child, 

Never shut up a chrysalis in a matchbox 

For the moth to spoil and crush its brght colours, 

Beating its wings against the dingy prisonwall. 

The Poplar

WHY do you always stand there shivering 

Between the white stream and the road? 

The people pass through the dust 

On bicycles, in carts, in motorcars; 

The waggoners go by at down; 

The lovers walk on the grass path at night. 

Stir from your roots, walk, poplar! 

You are more beautiful than they are. 

I know that the white wind loves you, 

Is always kissing you and turning up 

The white lining of your green petticoat. 

The sky darts through you like blue rain, 

And the grey rain drips on your flanks 

And loves you. 

And I have seen the moon 

Slip his silver penny into your pocket 

As you straightened your hair; 

And the white mist curling and hesitating 

Like a bashful lover about your knees. 

I know you, poplar; 

I have watched you since I was ten. 

But if you had a little real love, 

A little strength, 

You would leave your nonchalant idle lovers 

And go walking down the white road 

Behind the waggoners. 

There are beautiful beeches down beyond the hill. 

Will you always stand there shivering? 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

The Poplar 5



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Page No 8


RoundPond

WATER ruffled and speckled by galloping wind 

Which puffs and spurts it into tiny pashing breaks 

Dashed with lemonyellow afternoon sunlight. 

The shining of the sun upon the water 

Is like a scattering of gold crocuspetals 

In a long wavering irregular flight. 

The water is cold to the eye 

As the wind to the cheek. 

In the budding chestnuts 

Whose sticky buds glimmer and are halfburst open 

The starlings make their clitterclatter; 

And the blackbirds in the grass 

Are getting as fat as the pigeons. 

Toohoo, this is brave; 

Even the cold wind is seeking a new mistress. 

Daisy

"Plus quan se atque suos amavit omnes, 

nunc . . ." 

                    CATULLUS 

YOU were my playmate by the sea. 

We swam together. 

Your girl's body had no breasts. 

We found prawns among the rocks; 

We liked to feel the sun and to do nothing; 

In the evening we played games with the others. 

It made me glad to be by you. 

Sometimes I kissed you, 

And you were always glad to kiss me; 

But I was afraid  I was only fourteen. 

And I had quite forgotten you, 

You and your name. 

Today I pass through the streets. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

RoundPond 6



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Page No 9


She who touches my arms and talks with me 

Is  who knows?  Helen of Sparta, 

Dryope, Laodamia . . . . 

And there are you 

A whore in Oxford Street. 

Epigrams

A Girl 

YOU were that clear Sicilian fluting 

That pains our thought even now. 

You were the notes 

Of cold fantastic grief 

Some few found beautiful. 

New Love 

She had new leaves 

After her dead flowers, 

Like the little almondtree 

Which the frost hurt. 

October 

The beechleaves are silver 

For lack of the tree's blood. 

At your kiss my lips 

Become like the autumn beechleaves. 

The Faun Sees Snow for the First Time

ZEUS, 

Brazenthunderhurler, 

Cloudwhirler, sonofKronos, 

Send vengeance on these Oreads 

Who strew 

White frozen flecks of mist and cloud 

Over the brown trees and the tufted grass 

Of the meadows, where the stream


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Epigrams 7



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Page No 10


Runs black through shining banks 

Of bluish white. 

Zeus, 

Are the halls of heaven broken up 

That you flake down upon me 

Featherstrips of marble? 

Dis and Styx! 

When I stamp my hoof 

The frozencloudspecks jam into the cleft 

So that I reel upon two slippery points . . . . 

Fool, to stand here cursing 

When I might be running! 

Lemures

IN Nineveh 

And beyond Nineveh 

In the dusk 

They were afraid. 

In Thebes of Egypt 

In the dust 

They chanted of them to the dead. 

In my Lesbos and Achaia 

Where the God dwelt 

We knew them. 

Now men say "They are not": 

But in the dusk 

Ere the white sun comes  

A gay child that bears a white candle  

I am afraid of their rustling, 

Of their terrible silence, 

The menace of their secrecy. 

H.D.


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Lemures 8



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Page No 11


The Pool

ARE you alive? 

I touch you. 

You quiver like a seafish. 

I cover you with my net. 

What are you  banded one? 

The Garden

YOU are clear, 

O rose, cut in rock, 

hard as the descent of hail. 

I could scrape the colour 

from the petal, 

like spilt dye from a rock. 

If I could break you 

I could break a tree. 

If I could stir 

I could break a tree, 

I could break you. 

II 

O wind, 

rend open the heat, 

cut apart the heat, 

rend it sideways. 

Fruit can not drop 

through this thick air: 

fruit can not fall into heat 

that presses up and blunts 

the points of pears 

and rounds the grapes. 

Cut the heat, 

plough through it, 

turning it on either side 

of your path. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

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Page No 12


Sea Lily

REED, 

slashed and torn, 

but doubly rich  

such great heads as yours 

drift upon templesteps, 

but you are shattered 

in the wind. 

Myrtlebark 

is flecked from you, 

scales are dashed from your stem 

sand cuts your petal, 

furrows it with hard edge, 

like flint 

on a bright stone. 

Yet though the whole wind 

slash as your bark, 

you are lifted up, 

aye  though it hiss 

to cover you with froth. 

Sea Iris

WEED, mossweed, 

root tangled in sand, 

seairis, brittle flower, 

one petal like a shell 

is broken, 

and you print a shadow 

like a thin twig. 

Fortunate one, 

scented and stinging, 

rigid myrrhbud, 

camphorflower, 

sweet and salt  you are wind 

in our nostrils. 


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Sea Lily 10



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Page No 13


II 

Do the murexfishers 

drench you as they pass? 

Do your root drag up colour 

from the sand? 

Have they slipped gold under you; 

rivets of gold? 

Band of irisflowers 

above the waves, 

You are painted blue, 

painted like a fresh prow 

stained among the salt weeds. 

Sea Rose

ROSE, harsh rose, 

marred and with stint of petals, 

meagre flower, thin, 

sparse of leaf, 

more precious 

than a wet rose, 

single on a stem  

you are caught in the drift. 

Stunted, with small leaf, 

you are flung on the sands, 

you are lifted 

in the crisp sand 

that drives in the wind. 

Can the spicerose 

drip such acrid fragrance 

hardened in a leaf? 

Oread

WHIRL up, sea  

Whirl your pointed pines, 

Splash your great pines 

On our rocks, 

Hurl your green over us, 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Sea Rose 11



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Page No 14


Cover us with your pools of fir. 

Orion Dead

[Artemis speaks] 

THE corneltrees 

uplift from the furrows, 

the roots at their bases 

strike lower through the barleysprays. 

So arise and face me. 

I am poisoned with the rage of song. 

I once pierced the flesh 

of the wilddeer, 

now am I afraid to touch 

the blue and the goldveined hyacinths? 

I will tear the full flowers 

and the little heads 

of the grapehyacinths. 

I will strip the life from the bulb 

until the ivory layers 

lie like narcissus petals 

on the black earth. 

Arise, 

lest I bend an ashtree 

into a taut bow, 

and slay  and tear 

all the roots from the earth. 

The cornelwood blazes 

and strikes through the barleysprays, 

but I have lost heart for this. 

I break a staff. 

I break the tough branch. 

I know no light in the woods. 

I have lost pace with the winds. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

Orion Dead 12



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Page No 15


John Gould Fletcher

The Blue Symphony

THE darkness rolls upward. 

The thick darkness carries with it 

Rain and a ravel of cloud. 

The sun comes forth upon earth. 

Palely the dawn 

Leaves me facing timidly 

Old gardens sunken: 

And in the gardens is water. 

Sombre wrecks  autumnal leaves; 

Shadowy roofs 

In the blue mist, 

And a willowbranch that is broken. 

O old pagodas of my soul, how you glittered across green trees! 

Blue and cool: 

Blue, tremulously, 

Blow faint puffs of smoke 

Across sombre pools. 

The damp green smell of rotted wood; 

And a heron that cries from out the water. 

II 

Through the upland meadows 

I go alone. 

For I dreamed of someone last night 

Who is waiting for me. 

Flower and blossom, tell me do you know of her? 

Have the rocks hidden her voice? 

They are very blue and still. 

Long upward road that is leading me, 

Light hearted I quit you, 

For the long loose ripples of the meadowgrass 

Invite me to dance upon them. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

John Gould Fletcher 13



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Page No 16


Quivering grass 

Daintily poised 

For her foot's tripping. 

O blown clouds, could I only race up like you, 

Oh, the last slopes that are sundrenched and steep! 

Look, the sky! 

Across black valleys 

Rise bluewhite aloft 

Jagged, unwrinkled mountains, ranges of death. 

Solitude. Silence. 

III 

One chuckles by the brook for me: 

One rages under the stone. 

One makes a spout of his mouth, 

One whispers  one is gone. 

One over there on the water 

Spreads cold ripples 

For me 

Enticingly. 

The vast dark trees 

Flow like blue veils 

Of tears 

Into the water. 

Sour sprites, 

Moaning and chuckling, 

What have you hidden from me? 

"In the palace of the blue stone she lies forever 

Bound hand and foot." 

Was it the wind 

That rattled the reeds together? 

Dry reeds, a faint shiver in the grasses. 

IV 

On the left hand there is a temple: 

And a palace on the righthand side. 

Footpassengers in scarlet 

Pass over the glittering tide. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

John Gould Fletcher 14



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Page No 17


Under the bridge 

The old river flows 

Low and monotonous 

Day after day. 

I have heard and have seen 

All the news that has been: 

Autumn's gold and Spring's green! 

Now in my palace 

I see footpassengers 

Crossing the river: 

Pilgrims of Autumn 

In the afternoons. 

Lotus pools: 

Petals in the water. 

Such are my dreams. 

For me silks are outspread. 

I take my ease, unthinking. 

And now the lowest pinebranch 

Is drawn across the disk of the sun. 

Old friends who will forget me soon 

I must go on, 

Towards those blue deathmountains 

I have forgot so long. 

In the marsh grasses 

There lies forever 

My last treasure, 

With the hope of my heart. 

The ice is glazing over. 

Torn lanterns flutter, 

On the leaves is snow. 

In the frosty evening 

Toll the old bell for me 

Once, in the sleepy temple. 

Perhaps my soul will hear. 

Afterglow: 

Before the stars peep 

I shall creeep out into darkness. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

John Gould Fletcher 15



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Page No 18


London Excursion

'Bus 

GREAT walls of green, 

City that is afar. 

We gallop along 

Alert and penetrating, 

Roads open about us, 

Housetops keep at a distance. 

Softcurling tendrils, 

Swim backwards from our image: 

We are a red bulk, 

Projecting the angular city, in shadows, at our feet. 

Black coarsesquared shapes, 

Hump and growl and assemble. 

It is the city that takes us to itself, 

Vast thunder riding down strange skies. 

An arch under which we slide 

Divides our lives for us: 

After we have passed it 

We know we have left something behind 

We shall not see again. 

Passivity, 

Gravity, 

Are changed into hesitating, clanking pistons and wheels. 

The trams come whooping up one by one, 

Yellow pulsebeats spreading through darkness. 

Musichall posters squall out: 

The passengers shrink together, 

I enter indelicately into all their souls. 

It is a glossy skating rink, 

On which winged spirals clasp and bend eath other: 

And suddenly slide backwards towards the centre, 

After a toobrief release. 

A second arch is a wall 

To separate our souls from rotted cables 

Of stale greenness. 

A shadow cutting off the country from us, 

Out of it rise red walls. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

London Excursion 16



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Page No 19


Yet I revolt: I bend, I twist myself, 

I curl into a million convolutions: 

Pink shapes without angle, 

Anything to be soft and woolly, 

Anything to escape. 

Sudden lurch of clamours, 

Two more viaducts 

Stretch out red yokes of steel, 

Crushing my rebellion. 

My soul shrieking 

Is jolted forwards by a long hot bar  

Into direct distances. 

It pierces the small of my back. 

Approach 

ONLY this morning I sang of roses; 

Now I see with a swift stare, 

The city forcing up through the air 

Black cubes close piled and some halfcrumbling over. 

My roses are battered into pulp: 

And there swells up in me 

Sudden desire for something changeless, 

Thrusts of sunless rock 

Unmelted by hissing wheels. 

Arrival 

The rest is too still. 

It is a red sea 

Licking 

The housefronts. 

They quiver gently 

From base to summit. 

Ripples of impulse run through them, 

Flattering resistance. 

Soon they will fall; 

Already smoke yearns upward. 

Clouds of dust, 

Crash of collapsing cubes. 

I prefer deeper patience, 

Monotony of stalled beasts. 

O anglebuilders, 

Vainly have you prolonged your effort, 

For I descend amid you, 

Past rungs and slopes of curving slippery steel. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

London Excursion 17



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Page No 20


Walk 

Sudden struggle for foothold on the pavement, 

Familiar ascension. 

I do not heed the city any more, 

It has given me a duty to perform. 

I pass along nonchalantly, 

Insinuating myself into selfbaffling movements. 

Impalpable charm of back streets 

In which I find myself: 

Cool spaces filled with shadow. 

Passersby, white hammocks in the sunlight. 

Bulging outcrush into old tumult; 

Attainment, as of a narrow harbour, 

Of some shop forgotten by traffic 

With coolcorridored walls. 

'BusTop 

Black shapes bending 

Taxicabs crush in the crowd. 

The tops are each a shining square 

Shuttles that steadily press through woolly fabric. 

Drooping blossom, 

Gasstandards over 

Spray out jingling tumult 

Of whitehot rays. 

Monotonous domes of bowlerhats 

Vibrate in the heat. 

Silently, easily we sway through braying traffic, 

Down the crowded street. 

The tumult crouches over us, 

Or suddenly drifts to one side. 

Transposition 

I am blown like a leaf 

Hither and thither. 

The city about me 

Resolves itself into sound of many voices, 

Rustling and fluttering, 

Leaves shaken by the breeze. 

A million forces ignore me, I know not why, 

I am drunken with it all. 

Suddenly I feel an immense will 

Stored up hither to and unconscious till this instant. 

Projecting my body 

Across a streeet, in the face of all its traffic. 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

London Excursion 18



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Page No 21


I dart and dash: 

I do not know why I go. 

These people watch me, 

I yield them my adventure. 

Lazily I lounge through labyrintine corridors, 

And with eyes suddenly altered, 

I peer into an office I do not know, 

And wonder at a startled face that penetrates my own. 

Roses  pavement  

I will take all this city away with me  

People  uproar  the pavement jostling and flickering  

Women with incredible eyelids: 

Dandies in spats: 

Hardfaced throng discussing me  I know them all. 

I will take them away with me, 

I insistently rob them of their essence, 

I must have it all before night, 

To sing amid my green. 

I glide out unobservant 

In the midst of the traffic 

Blown like a leaf 

Hither and thither, 

Till the city resolves itself into the clamour of voices, 

Crying hollowly, like the wind rustling through the forest 

Against the frozen housefronts: 

Lost in the glitter of a million movements. 

Peripeteia 

I can no longer find a place for myself: 

I go. 

There are too many things to detain me, 

But the force behind is reckless. 

Noise, uproar, movement 

Slide me outwards, 

Black sleet shivering 

Down red walls. 

In thick jungles of green, this gyration, 

My centrifugal folly, 

Through roaring dust and futility spattered, 

Will find its own repose. 

Golden lights will gleam sullenly into silence, 

Before I return. 

MidFlight 


Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology

London Excursion 19



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Page No 22


We rush, a black throng, 

Straight upon darkness: 

Motes scattered 

By the arc's rays. 

Over the bridge fluttering, 

It is theatretime, 

No one heeds. 

Lost amid greenness 

We will sleep all night; 

And in the morning 

Coming forth, we will shake wet wings 

Over the settled dust of today. 

The city hurls its cobbled streets after us, 

To drive us faster. 

We must attain the night 

Before endless processions 

Of lamps 

Push us back. 

A clock with quivering hands 

Leaps to the trajectoryangle of our departure. 

We leave behind pale traces of achievement: 

Fires that we kindled but were too tired to put out, 

Broad gold fans brushing softly over dark walls, 

Stifled uproar of night. 

We are already cast forth: 

The signal of our departure 

Jerks down before we have learned we are to go. 

Station 

We descend 

Into a wall of green. 

Straggling shapes: 

Afterwards none are seen. 

I find myself 

Alone. 

I look back: 

The city has grown. 

One grey wall 

Windowed, unlit. 

Heavily, night 

Crushes the face of it. 


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Page No 23


I go on. 

My memories freeze 

Like birds' cry 

In hollow trees. 

I go on. 

Up and outright 

To the hostility 

Of night. 

F.S. Flint

Trees

ELM trees 

and the leaf the boy in me hated 

long ago  

rough and sandy. 

Poplars 

and their leaves, 

tender, smooth to the fingers, 

and a secret in their smell 

I have forgotten. 

Oaks 

and forest glades, 

heart aching with wonder, fear: 

their bitter mast. 

Willows 

and the scented beetle 

we put in our handkerchiefs; 

and the roots of one 

that spread into a river: 

nakedness, water and joy. 

Hawthorn, 

white and odorous with blossom, 

framing the quiet fields, 

and swaying flowers and grasses, 

and the hum of bees. 


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Page No 24


Oh, these are the things that are with me now, 

in the town; 

and I am grateful 

for this minute of my manhood. 

Lunch

FRAIL beauty, 

green, gold and incandescent whiteness, 

narcissi, daffodils, 

you have brought me Spring and longing, 

wistfulness, 

in your irradiance. 

Therefore, I sit here 

among the people, 

dreaming, 

and my heart arches 

with all the hawthorn blossom, 

the bees humming, 

the light wind upon the poplars, 

and your warmth and your love 

and your eyes . . . 

they smile and know me. 

Malady

I MOVE: 

perhaps I have wakened; 

this is a bed; 

this is a room; 

and there is light . . . 

Darkness! 

Have I performed 

the dozen acts or so 

that make me the man 

men see? 

The door opens, 

and on the landing  

quiet! 


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Page No 25


I can see nothing: the pain, the weariness! 

Stairs, banisters, a handrail: 

all indistinguishable. 

One step farther down or up, 

and why? 

But up is harder. Down! 

Down to this white blur; 

it gives before me. 

Me? 

I extend all ways: 

I fit into the walls and they pull me. 

Light? 

Light! I know it is light. 

Stillness, and then, 

something moves: 

green, oh green, dazzling lightning! 

And joy! this is my room; 

there are my books, there the piano, 

there the last bar I wrote, 

there the last line, 

and oh the sunlight! 

A parrot screeches. 

Accident

DEAR one! 

you sit there 

in the corner of the carriage; 

and you do not know me; 

and your eyes forbid. 

Is it the dirt, the squalor, 

the wear of human bodies, 

and the dead faces of our neighbours? 

These are but symbols. 

You are proud; I praise you; 

your mouth is set; you see beyond us; 

and you see nothing. 

I have the vision of your calm, cold face, 


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Page No 26


and of the black hair that waves above it; 

I watch you; I love you; 

I desire you. 

There is a quiet here 

within the thudthud of the wheels 

upon the railway. 

There is a quiet here 

within my heart, 

but tense and tender . . . 

This is my station . . . 

Fragment

        . . . THAT night I loved you 

in the candlelight. 

Your golden hair 

strewed the sweet whiteness of the pillows 

and the counterpane. 

O the darkness of the corners, 

the warm air, and the stars 

framed in the casement of the ships' lights! 

The waves lapped into the harbour; 

the boats creaked; 

a man's voice sang out on the quay; 

and you loved me. 

In your love were the tall tree fuchsias, 

the blue of the hortensias, the scarlet nasturtiums, 

the trees on the hills, 

the roads we had covered, 

and the sea that had borne your body 

before the rock of Hartland. 

You loved me with these 

and with the kindness of people, 

country folk, sailors and fisherman, 

and the old lady who had lodged us and supped us. 

You loved me with yourself 

that was these and more, 

changed as the earth is changed 

into the bloom of flowers. 


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Page No 27


Houses

EVENING and quiet: 

a bird trills in the poplar trees 

behind the house with the dark green door 

across the road. 

Into the sky, 

the red earthenware and the galvanised iron chimneys 

thrust their cowls. 

The hoot of the steamers on the Thames is plain. 

No wind; 

the trees merge, green with green; 

a car whirs by; 

footsteps and voices take their pitch 

in the key of dusk, 

faroff and near, subdued. 

Solid and square to the world 

the houses stand, 

their windows blocked with venetian blinds. 

Nothing will move them. 

EauForte

ON black bare trees a stale cream moon 

hangs dead, and sours the unborn buds. 

Two gaunt old hacks, knees bent, heads low, 

tug, tired and spent, an old horse tram. 

Damp smoke, rank mist fill the dark square; 

and round the bend six bullocks come. 

A hobbling, dirtgrimed drover guides 

their clattering feet to death and shame. 

D.H. Lawrence


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Page No 28


Ballad of Another Ophelia

OH, the green glimmer of apples in the orchard, 

Lamps in a wash of rain, 

Oh, the wet walk of my brown hen through the stackyard, 

O, tears on the window pane! 

Nothing now will ripen the bright green apples, 

Full of disappointment and of rain, 

Brackish they will taste, of tears, when the yellow dapples 

Of Autumn tell the withered tale again. 

All round the yard it is cluck, my brown hen, 

Cluck, and the rainwet wings, 

Cluck, my marigold bird, and again 

Cluck for your yellow darlings. 

For the grey rat found the gold thirteen 

Huddled away in the dark, 

Flutter for a moment, oh the beast is quick and keen, 

Extinct one yellowfluffy spark. 

. . . . . . . . . 

Once I had a lover bright like running water, 

Once his face was laughing like the sky; 

Open like the sky looking down in all its laughter 

On the buttercups  and buttercups was I. 

What then is there hidden in the skirts of all the blossom, 

What is peeping from your wings, oh mother hen? 

'Tis the sun who asks the question, in a lovely haste for wisdom  

What a lovely haste for wisdom is in men? 

Yea, but it is cruel when undressed is all the blossom, 

And her shift is lying white upon the floor, 

That a grey one, like a shadow, like a rat, a thie, a rainstorm 

Creeps upon her then and gathers in his store. 

Oh, the grey garner that is full of halfgrown apples, 

Oh, the golden sparkles laid extinct  ! 

And oh, behind the cloud sheaves, like yellow autumn dapples, 

Did you see the wicked sun that winked? 


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Page No 29


Illicit

IN front of the sombre mountains, a faint, lost ribbon of rainbow, 

And between us and it, the thunder; 

And down below, in the green wheat, the labourers 

Stand like dark stumps, still in the green wheat. 

You are near to me, and your naked feet in their sandals, 

And through the scent of the balcony's naked timber 

I distinguish the scent of your hair; so now the limber 

Lightning falls from heaven. 

Adown the palegreen, glacierriver floats 

A dark boat through the gloom  and whither? 

The thunder roars. But still we have each other. 

The naked lightnings in the heaven dither 

And disappear. What have we but each other? 

The boat has gone. 

Fireflies in the Corn

A Woman taunts her Lover 

LOOK at the little darlings in the corn! 

The rye is taller than you, who think yourself 

So high and mighty: look how its heads are borne 

Dark and proud in the sky, like a number of knights 

Passing with spears and pennants and manly scorn. 

And always likely!  Oh, if I could ride 

With my head held highserene against the sky 

Do you think I'd have a creature like you at my side 

With your gloom and your doubt that you love me? 

O darling rye, 

How I adore you for your simple pride! 

And those bright fireflies wafting in between 

And over the swaying cornstalks, just above 

All their darkfeathered helmets, like little green 

Stars come low and wandering here for love 

Of this dark earth, and wandering all serene  ! 

How I adore you, you happy things, you dears 

Riding the air and carrying all the time 

Your little lanterns behind you: it cheers 


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Page No 30


My heart to see you settling and trying to climb 

The cornstalks, tipping with fire their spears. 

All over the corn's dim motion, against the blue 

Dark sky of night, the wandering glitter, the swarm 

Of questing brilliant things:  you joy, you true 

Spirit of careless joy: ah, how I warm 

My poor and perished soul at the joy of you! 

The Man answers and she mocks 

You're a fool, woman. I love you and you know I do! 

Lord, take his love away, it makes him whine. 

And I give you everything that you want me to. 

Lord, dear Lord, do you think he ever can shine? 

A Woman and Her Dead Husband

AH, stern cold man, 

How can you lie so relentless hard 

While I wash you with weeping water! 

Ah, face, carved hard and cold, 

You have been like this, on your guard 

Against me, since death began. 

You masquerader! 

How can you shame to act this part 

Of unswerving indifference to me? 

It is not you; why disguise yourself 

Against me, to break my heart, 

You evader? 

You've a warm mouth, 

A good warm mouth always sooner to soften 

Even than your sudden eyes. 

Ah cruel, to keep your mouth 

Relentless, however often 

I kiss it in drouth. 

You are not he. 

Who are you, lying in his pace on the bed 

And rigid and indifferent to me? 

His mouth, though he laughed or sulked 

Was always warm and red 

And good to me. 

And his eyes could see 

The white moon hang like a breast revealed 


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Page No 31


By the slipping shawl of stars, 

Could see the small stars tremble 

As the heart beneath did wield 

Systole, diastole. 

And he showed it me 

So, when he made his love to me; 

And his brows like rocks on the sea jut out, 

And his eyes were deep like the sea 

With shadow, and he looked at me, 

Till I sank in him like the sea, 

Awfully. 

Oh, he was multiform  

Which then was he among the manifold? 

The gay, the sorrowful, the seer? 

I have loved a rich race of men in one  

But not this, this neverwarm 

Metalcold  ! 

Ah, masquerader! 

With your steel face whiteenamelled 

Were you he, after all, and I never 

Saw you or felt you in kissing? 

Yet sometimes my heart was trammelled 

With fear, evader! 

You will not stir, 

Nor hear me, not a sound. 

Then it was you  

And all this time you were 

Like this when I lived with you. 

It is not true, 

I am frightened, I am frightened of you 

And of everything. 

O God!  God too 

Has deceived me in everything, 

In everything. 

The Mowers

THERE'S four men mowing down by the river; 

        I can hear the sound of the scythe strokes, four 

Sharp breaths swishing:  yea, but I 

        Am sorry for what's i' store. 

The first man out o' the four that's mowin' 

        Is mine: I mun claim him once for all: 


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Page No 32


But I'm sorry for him, on his young feet, knowin' 

        None o' the trouble he's led to stall. 

As he sees me bringin' the dinner, he lifts 

        His head as proud as a deer that looks 

Shoulderdeep out o' th' corn: and wipes 

        His scythe blade bright, unhooks 

His scythe stone, an' over the grass to me! 

         Lad, tha's gotten a chilt in me, 

An' a man an' a father tha'lt ha'e to be, 

        My young slim lad, an' I'm sorry for thee. 

Scent of Irises

A FAINT, sickening scent of irises 

Persists all morning. Here in a jar on the table 

A fine proud spike of purple irises 

Rising above the clsssroom litter, makes me unable 

To see the class's lifted and bended faces 

Save in a broken pattern, amid purple and gold and sable. 

I can smell the gorgeous bogend, in its breathless 

Dazzle of mayblobs, when the marigold glare overcast 

You with fire on your brow and your cheeks and your chin as you dipped 

Your face in your marigold bunch, to touch and contrast 

Your own dark mouth with the bridal faint ladysmocks 

Dissolved in the golden sorcery you should not outlast. 

You amid the bogend's yellow incantation, 

You sitting in the cowslips of the meadows above, 

Me, your shadow on the bogflame, flowery maybobs, 

Me full length in the cowslips, muttering you love  

You, your soul like a ladysmock, lost, evanescent, 

You, with your face all rich, like the sheen on a dove  ! 

You are always asking, do I remember, remember 

The buttercup bogend where the flowers rose up 

And kindled you over deep with a coat of gold? 

You ask again, do the healing days close up 

The open darkness which then drew us in, 

The dark that swallows all, and nought throws up. 

You upon the dry, dead beechleaves, in the fire of night 

Burnt like a sacrifice;  you invisible  

Only the fire of darkness, and the scent of you! 

And yes, thank God, it still is possible 

The healing days shall close the darkness up 


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Page No 33


Wherein I breathed you like a smoke or dew. 

Like vapour, dew, or poison. Now, thank God, 

The golden fire has gone, and your face is ash 

Indistinguishable in the grey, chill day, 

The night has burnt you out, at last the good 

Dark fire burns on untroubled without clash 

Of you upon the dead leaves saying me yea. 

Green

THE sky was applegreen, 

The sky was green wine held up in the sun, 

The moon was a golden petal between. 

She opened her eyes, and green 

They shone, clear like flowers undone, 

For the first time, now for the first time seen. 

Amy Lowell

Venus Transiens

TELL me, 

Was Venus more beautiful 

Than you are, 

When she topped 

The crinkled waves, 

Drifting shoreward 

On her plaited shell? 

Was Botticelli's vision 

Fairer than mine; 

And were the painted rosebuds 

He tossed his lady, 

Of better worth 

Than the words I blow about you 

To cover your too great loveliness 

As with a gauze 

Of misted silver? 


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Page No 34


For me, 

You stand poised 

In the blue and buoyant air, 

Cinctured by bright winds, 

Treading the sunlight. 

And the waves which precede you 

Ripple and stir 

The sands at my feet. 

The Travelling Bear

GRASSBLADES push up between the cobblestones 

And catch the sun on their flat sides 

Shooting it back, 

Gold and emerald, 

Into the eyes of passersby. 

And over the cobblestones, 

Squarefooted and heavy, 

Dances the trained bear. 

The cobbles cut his feet, 

And he has a ring in his nose 

But still he dances, 

For the keeper pricks him with a sharp stick, 

Under his fur. 

Now the crowd gapes and chuckles, 

And boys and young women shuffle their feet in time to the dancing bear, 

They see him wobbling 

Against a dust of emerald and gold, 

And they are greatly delighted. 

The legs of the bear shake with fatigue 

And his back aches, 

And the shining grassblades dazzle and confuse him. 

But still he dances, 

Because of the little, pointed stick. 

The Letter

LITTLE cramped words scrawling all over the paper 

Like draggled fly's legs, 

What can you tell of the flaring moon 

Through the oak leaves? 

Or of my uncurtained window and the bare floor 

Spattered with moonlight? 

Your silly quirks and twists have nothing in them 


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Page No 35


Of blossoming hawthorns, 

And this paper is dull, crisp, smooth, virgin of loveliness 

Beneath my hand. 

I am tired, Beloved, of chafing my heart against 

The want of you; 

Of squeezing it into little inkdrops, 

And posting it. 

And I scald alone, here, under the fire 

Of the greater moon. 

Grotesque

WHY do the lilies goggle their tongues at me 

When I pluck them; 

And writhe, and twist, 

And stangle themselves against my fingers, 

So that I can hardly weave the garland 

For your hair? 

Why do they shriek your name 

And spit at me 

When I would cluster them? 

Must I kill them 

To make them lie still, 

And send you a wreath of lolling corpses 

To turn putrid and soft 

On your forehead 

While you dance? 

Bullion

MY thoughts 

Chink against my ribs 

And roll about like silver hailstones. 

I should like to spill them out, 

And pour them, all shining, 

Over you. 

But my heart is shut upon them 

And holds them straitly. 

Come, You! and open my heart; 

That my thoughts torment me no longer, 

But glitter in your hair. 


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Page No 36


Solitaire

WHEN night drifts along the streets of the city, 

And sifts down between the uneven roofs, 

My mind begins to peek and peer. 

It plays at ball in old, blue Chinese gardens, 

And shakes wrought dicecups in Pagan temples, 

Amid the broken flutings of white pillars. 

It dances with purple and yellow crocuses in its hair, 

And its feet shine as they flutter over drenched grasses. 

How light and laughing my mind is, 

When all the good folk have put out their bedroom candles, 

And the city is still! 

The Bombardment

SLOWLY, without force, the rain drops into the city. It stops a moment on the carved head of Saint John,

then slides on again, slipping and trickling over his stone cloak. It splashes from the lead conduit of a

gargoyle, and falls from it in turmoil on the stones of the Cathedral square. Where are the people, and why

does the fretted steeple sweep about in the sky? Boom! The sound swings against the rain. Boom, again!

After it, only water rushing in the gutters, and the turmoil from the spout of the gargoyle. Silence. Ripples

and mutters. Boom! 

The room is damp, but warm. Little flashes swarm about from the firelight. The lustres of the chandelier are

bright, and clusters of rubies leap in the bohemian glasses on the étagère. Her hands are restless, but the white

masses of her hair are quite still. Boom! Will it never cease to torture, this iteration! Boom! The vibration

shatters a glass on the étagère. It lies there formless and flowing, with all its crimson gleams shot out of

pattern, spilled, flowing red, bloodred. A thin bellnote pricks through the silence. A door creaks. The old

lady speaks: "Victor, clear away that broken glass." "Alas! Madame, the bohemian glass!" "Yes, Victor, one

hundred years ago my father brought it  " Boom! The room shakes, the servitor quakes. Another goblet

shivers and breaks. Boom! 

It rustles at the windowpane, the smooth, streaming rain, and he is shut within its clash and murmur. Inside

is his candle, his table, his ink, his pen, and his dreams. He is thinking, and the walls are pierced with beams

of sunshine, slipping through young green. A fountain tosses itself up at the blue sky, and through the

spattered water in the basin he can see copper carp, lazily floating among cold leaves. A windharp in the

cedartree grieves and whispers, and words blow into his brain, bubbled, iridescent, shooting up like flowers

of fire, higher and higher. Boom! The flameflowers snap on their slender stems. The fountain rears up in

long broken spears of disheveled water and flattens into the earth. Boom! And there is only the room, the

table, the candle, and the sliding rain. Again, Boom!  Boom!  Boom! He stuffs his fingers into his ears.

He sees corpses, and cries out in fright. Boom! It is night, and they are shelling the city! Boom! Boom! 

A child wakes and is afraid, and weeps in the darkness. What has made the bed shake? "Mother, where are

you? I am awake." "Hush, my Darling, I am here." "But, Mother, something so queer has happened, the room

shook." Boom! "Oh! What is it? What is the matter?" Boom! "Where is Father? I am so afraid." Boom! The


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Page No 37


child sobs and shrieks. The house trembles and creaks. Boom! 

Retorts, globes, tubes, and phials lie shattered. All his trials oozing across the floor. The life that was his

choosing, lonely, urgent, goaded by a hope, all gone. A weary gloom and ignorance, and the jig of drunken

brutes. Diseases like snakes crawling over the earth, leaving trails of slime. Wails from people burying their

dead. Through the window he can see the rocking steeple. A ball of fire falls on the lead of the roof, and the

sky tears apart on the spike of flame. Up the spire, behind the lacings of stone, zigzagging in and out of the

carved tracings, squirms the fire. It spouts like yellow wheat from the gargoyles, coils round the head of Saint

John, and aureoles him in light. It leaps into the night and hisses against the rain. The Cathedral is a burning

stain on the white, wet night. 

Boom! The Cathedral is a torch, and the houses next to it begin to scorch. Boom! The bohemian glass on the

étagère is no longer there. Boom! A stalk of flame sways against the red damask curtains. The old lady

cannot walk. She watches the creeping stalk and counts. Boom!  Boom!  Boom! 

The poet rushes into the street, and the rain wraps him in a sheet of silver. But it is threaded with gold and

powdered with scarlet beads. The city burns. Quivering, spearing, thrusting, lapping, streaming, run the

flames. Over the roofs, and walls, and shops, and stalls. Smearing its gold on the sky the fire dances, lances

itself through the doors, and lisps and chuckles along the floors. 

The child wakes again and screams at the yellow petalled flower flickering at the window. The little red lips

of flame creep along the ceiling beams. 

The old man sits among his broken experiments and looks at the burning Cathedral. Now the streets are

swarming with people. They seek shelter and crowd into the cellars. They shout and call, and over all, slowly

and without force, the rain drops into the city. Boom! And the steeple crashes down among the people.

Boom! Boom, again! The water rushes along the gutters. The fire roars and mutters. Boom! 


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Bookmarks



1. Table of Contents, page = 3

2. Some Imagist Poets: An Anthology, page = 4

   3. Amy Lowell, DH Lawrence, HD, etc, page = 4

4. Richard Aldington, page = 5

   5. Childhood, page = 5

   6. The Poplar, page = 8

   7. Round-Pond, page = 9

   8. Daisy, page = 9

   9. Epigrams, page = 10

   10. The Faun Sees Snow for the First Time, page = 10

   11. Lemures, page = 11

12. H.D., page = 11

   13. The Pool, page = 12

   14. The Garden, page = 12

   15. Sea Lily, page = 13

   16. Sea Iris, page = 13

   17. Sea Rose, page = 14

   18. Oread, page = 14

   19. Orion Dead, page = 15

20. John Gould Fletcher, page = 16

   21. The Blue Symphony, page = 16

   22. London Excursion, page = 19

23. F.S. Flint, page = 24

   24. Trees, page = 24

   25. Lunch, page = 25

   26. Malady, page = 25

   27. Accident, page = 26

   28. Fragment, page = 27

   29. Houses, page = 28

   30. Eau-Forte, page = 28

31. D.H. Lawrence, page = 28

   32. Ballad of Another Ophelia, page = 29

   33. Illicit, page = 30

   34. Fireflies in the Corn, page = 30

   35. A Woman and Her Dead Husband, page = 31

   36. The Mowers, page = 32

   37. Scent of Irises, page = 33

   38. Green, page = 34

39. Amy Lowell, page = 34

   40. Venus Transiens, page = 34

   41. The Travelling Bear, page = 35

   42. The Letter, page = 35

   43. Grotesque, page = 36

   44. Bullion, page = 36

   45. Solitaire, page = 37

   46. The Bombardment, page = 37