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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Amy Lowell

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

The Vow

Amy Lowell

From “Southern April”

TREAD softly, softly,

Scuffle no dust.

No common thoughts shall thrust

Upon this peaceful decay,

This mold and rust of yesterday.

This is an altar with its incense blown away

By the indifferent wind of a long, sad night;

These are the precincts of the dead who die

Unconquered. Haply

You who haunt this place

May deign some gesture of forgiveness

To those of our sundered race

Who come in all humility

Asking an alms of pardon.

Suffer us to feel an ease,

A benefice of love poured down on us from these magnolia trees,

That when we leave you we shall know the bitter wound

Of our long mutual scourging healed at last and sound.

Through an iron gate, fantastically scrolled and garlanded,

Along a path, green with moss, between two rows of high magnolia trees—

How lightly the wind drips through the magnolias;

How slightly the magnolias bend to the wind.

It stands, pushed back into a corner of the piazza—

A jouncing-board, with its paint scaled off,

A jouncing-board which creaks when you sit upon it.

The wind rattles the stiff leaves of the magnolias:

So may tinkling banjos drown the weeping of women.

When the Yankees came like a tide of locusts,

When blue uniforms blocked the ends of streets,

And foolish, arrogant swords struck through the paintings of a hundred years:

From gold and ivory coasts come the winds that jingle in the tree-tops;

But the sigh of the wind in the unshaven grass, from whence is that?

Proud hearts who could not endure desecration,

Who almost loathed the sky because it was blue;

Vengeful spirits, locked in young, arrogant bodies,

You cursed yourselves with a vow:

Never would you set foot again in Charleston streets,

Never leave your piazza till Carolina was rid of Yankees.

O smooth wind sliding in from the sea,

It is a matter of no moment to you what flag you are flapping.

Ocean tides, morning and evening, slipping past the sea-islands;

Tides slipping in through the harbor, shaking the palmetto posts,

Slipping out through the harbor;

Pendulum tides, counting themselves upon the sea-islands.

So they jounced, for health’s sake,

To be well and able to rejoice when once again the city was free,

And the lost cause won, and the stars and bars afloat over Sumter.

The days which had roared to them called more softly,

The days whispered, the days were silent, they moved as imperceptibly as mist.

And the proud hearts went with the days, into the dusk of age, the darkness of death.

Slowly they were borne away through a Charleston they scarcely remembered.

The jouncing-board was pushed into a corner;

Only the magnolia-trees tossed a petal to it, now and again, if there happened to be a strong wind when the blooms were dropping.

Hush, go gently,

Do not move a pebble with your foot.

This is a moment of pause,

A moment to recollect the futility of cause.

A moment to bow the head

And greet the unconcerned dead,

Denying nothing of their indifference,

And then go hence

And forget them again,

Since lives are lived with living men.