V
The Black Mass
I
Lord! on love’s altar lies the sacrament. To feel the murderous ardour of the priest Loosed by the pang— even thus you know it is, In mine own life-blood I exult to float |
II
You stand away— to let your long lash curl Like to a wounded snake infuriated Of storm on some innavigable sea. Ah, devil! devil! when you grip me and glare |
III
A virgin with the lusts of Messaline, You ache— you burn— you dizzy me with blows— Torrents of blazing lava, that shall hiss Better than slack delight and murmuring sigh— |
IV
Spit in my face! I love you. Clench your fists And with your teeth tear bleeding bits of flesh Ay! you shall weary in the erotic craving! Famished with love, fed full with love, your soul |
V
The goal of love is gotten not of these We have the wisdom of the saints of old For us the glamour of the dawn suborning, Ah, Lola! but we suffer. Hell’s own worm |
VI
You grind your tiny shoes into my face; You rub your naked body against mine; Of torture and bliss; we wake and yearn, —At last you see, my maiden? Kiss me! Kiss! |
VII
There is a respite— we must part anon. Or being but mortal, or nearly mortal, yield That catches common folk. O God! bite hard! O Lola! Lola! Lola! Kiss me, kiss! |
VIII
You are a devil gloating on the pain Whispering a word of this. Ah! joy it is You love yourself for stealing me away When mouth to mouth we clung, and breath for breath |
IX
I love you for your cruelty to them; Sucked deep into your body, curling round Of your own vice. Our souls, a murdering crew Kissing fanatically the cross that had |
X
Ay! rub yourself, you big lascivious cat, Call upon Aphrodite! she will send Nay! wrap yourself and rub yourself in silk! Are we not glad thereof? Kiss, Lola, kiss, |
XI
Follow Iacchus from the Indian vales! While the moon lasts; then plunge in trackless woods! All words! words! there’s a hunger to express Whose fume arises from the accursed sod |
XII
So in this agony of enforcèd silence Devils and dancers, druid rites and dread, Conjoined in spinthriae of bestial form, —Such are the discords that absolve the strain |
XIII
Forgive me, o my holy and happy maid, Simple and sweet and chaste our love is ever, Lola, dear Lola, mystic maiden o’ mine, Abide within— with me! Let silence sever |
XIV
Though I adorn my thought with angel tresses Life is but one caress, one song of gladness, The stars that follow our lofty pilgrimage Wherefore accept these meteor flames that dance |
Notes
XI. 6. |
A reference to the Bacchae of Euripides. |