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Sat Anarchist Gon Fanfew


Notching the ears of his light-o’-love,


A murderess known as Lou.


When out of the night where the bullets hummed,


Into the smoking dive


A stranger shot his way within,


Waving a forty-five.

He came with a run as he pulled his gun


And he fired shot three or four


And then he gathered the bodies up


And hove them out the door.


He cut the throat of the music-girl


And sat down on the stool


And if that fellow couldn’t play,


Well, I’m a Royal fool.


He played such tunes as the “Cutthroat’s League”


And “The Murderer’s March” and then


He swung into a tune of his own,


’Twas much like “The Devil’s Den”.

He played of the far-famed “good-old-days”


Sweethearts and lover’s moon,


And as he played we seemed to see


A snug and cozy saloon.


And the rush of the Royal troops,


He shifted the accordion screws,


“No work, no pay!” it seemed to say,


And we shrieked our lust for booze.


And then the stranger wheeled about


And he pulled out his gun,


“And boys,” said he, “you don’t know me


But you will before I’m done.”

“I’ve got some word I wish to say


And they are but a few


But one of you is a bourgeoisie


And that one is Gon Fanfew!”


I ducked and somebody set off a fuse


Two bombs blazed in the dark


Somebody started throwing knives


And guns began to bark.


Somebody blew the roof clear off


And the Northern Lights streamed in


Somebody set the saloon on fire


And splashed the walls with gin.


Pitched on his head and widely spread


Lay Anarchist Gon Fanfew


And there with the stranger’s head in her hand


Lay the woman known as Lou.

But The Hill Were Ancient Then

Table of Contents

Now is a summer come out of the sea,


And the hills that were bare are green.


They shower the petals and the bee


On the valleys that laze between.



So it was in the dreaming past,


And life is a shifting maze,


Summer on summer fading fast,


In a mist of yesterdays.



Out of the East, the tang of smoke,


The flight of the startled deer,


A ringing axe the silence broke,


The tread of the pioneer.



Saxon eyes in a weathered face,


Cabins where trees had been,


Hard on the heels of a fading race,


But the hills were ancient then.



Up from the South a haze of dust,


The pack mules' steady pace,


Armor tarnished and red with rust,


Stern eyes in a sun-bronzed face.



The mesquite mocked the flag of Spain,


That the wind flung out again,


The grass bent under the pack mule train—


But the hills were ancient then.

The Chinese Gong

Table of Contents

StrumaSTRUM, struma strum struma strum strum strum!


Roaring out the rally o’er the rumble of the drum!


Talking down the cannon with its boomaloomaboom!


Catchee plentee killee on the river plentee soon!


Shouting down to Canton with the Yellow River scum


Shaking coral buttons in a Holy City room.


Stroomabooma stroomabooma boom boom boom!


Daring decent devils like demoniacal doom.


Soom plentee plunder ‘long the Yellow River’s junks!


Hoomalooma hoomalooma strum stroom strum!


Streaming from the mountains are a million yellow monks.


Sellee loot to Melican and catchee plentee rum.


Yellow feet a-clatter on the clumpy cobbled street


Shouting of the shikars where the shore and river meet.


Roaring at the rumor of a raiding rider seen.


Lanterns in pagodas with a glimmer blue and green.


Sellee loot to Melican, chatchee Hong Kong.


—Yelling tinkling tales to a terrible tong.


Struma strooma strumastrooma kongalongbong!


Listen to the clatter of the Chinese gong.

The Choir Girl

Table of Contents

I have a saintly voice, the people say;


With Elder Blank I send the music winging—


I smile and compliment him on his singing—


By God, I'd rather hear a jackass bray.


I nod and smile to all the pious sisters—


I wish their rears were stung with seven blisters.


That youthful minister, so straight and slim—


I'd trade my soul for one long night with him.

Crete

Table of Contents

The green waves wash above us


Who slumber in the bay


As washed the tide of ages


That swept our race away.



Our cities - dusty ruins;


Our galleys - deep sea slime;


Our very ghosts, forgotten,


Bow to the sweep of Time.



Our land lies stark before it


As we to alien spears,


But, ah, the love we bore it


Outlasts the crawling years.



Ah, jeweled spires at even -


The lute's soft golden sigh -


The Lion-Gates of Knossos


When dawn was in the sky.

Dead Man’s Hate

Table of Contents

They hanged John Farrel in the dawn amid the marketplace;


At dusk came Adam Brand to him and spat upon his face.


"Ho neighbors all," spake Adam Brand, "see ye John Farrel's fate!


"Tis proven here a hempen noose is stronger than man's hate!



For heard ye not John Farrel's vow to be avenged upon me


Come life or death? See how he hangs high on the gallows tree!"


Yet never a word the people spoke, in fear and wild surprise-


For the grisly corpse raised up its head and stared with sightless eyes,



And with strange motions, slow and stiff, pointed at Adam Brand


And clambered down the gibbet tree, the noose within its hand.


With gaping mouth stood Adam Brand like a statue carved of stone,


Till the dead man laid a clammy hand hard on his shoulder bone.



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