Crosby

’s "Rivals" Essay, Research Paper


from the Atlantic Monthly, 1922


Jazz


Theodore Maynard


The band began its music, and I saw


A hundred people in the cabaret


Stand up in couples meekly to obey


The arbitrary and remorseless law


Of custom. And I wondered what could draw


Their weary wills to this fulfillment. Gay


They were not. They embraced without dismay,


Lovers who showed an awful lack of awe.


Then, as I sat and drank my wine apart,


I pondered on this new religion, which


Lay heavily on the faces of the rich,


Who, occupied with ritual, never smiled –


Because I heard, within my quiet heart,


Happiness laughing like a little child.


Biographical Note: "Theodore Maynard, a poet new to the Atlantic, sends us


his sonnet from California."


from the Atlantic Monthly, 1925


Mississippi Melodies


Virginia Moore


III. Cotton Chorus


Niggah standin’, niggah squattin’,


Flirt yo’ fingahs in de cotton


Boles what huddle thick;


Tag along de Aprul harrow


What wedged wobbly, deep, an’ narrow –


Pick, pick, pick!


Drap no riffraff in de cotton,


Nothin’ sharp an’ nothin’ rotten


Lak a leaf o’ stick;


Swang it on yo’ giant shouldah


‘Foh de racin’ sun am oldah –


Pick, pick, pick!


All de cankahs in de cotton,


Wo’ms an’ weevils am fohgotten


An’ fohgotten quick,


When de bended backs an’ fingahs


Ob a hund’ud blackbird singahs


Pick, pick, pick!


Gunny sacks ob cleanes’ cotton,


Lak a goss’mah cloud a-clottin’,


Once was flowah-sick –


Pink an’ pale an’ vi’let gloomin’,


Color ob a ‘latto ‘ooman –


Pick, pick, pick!


Augus’ sun am pow’ful hot an’


Set on arguin’ wid de cotton


Lak a luni-tick –


But de cool ob night am comin’


An’ de dimmy stars am hummin’


Pick, pick, pick!


Biographical Note: "The primitive and natural melodies of Virginia Moore are


rooted in the earth of the Mississippi plantation where Miss Moore and her family have


lived for generations."


from The Atlantic Monthly, 1925


Conversation Baln?aire


by Archibald MacLeish


I indicate the evening sea. I say,


This endless silence edged with unending sound!


I say, This colorless where colors sway


and swim like lustre in a pearl, this drowned


moonshine, this shallow of translucent air,


this bubble that the winds break, the clouds change,


this smooth, this vague, this sea!


You


merely stare.


You turn your face to me. You say, it’s strange,


unreal almost. I don’t know what they mean,


these waves, this water. If I shut my eyes


it’s gone—like that—as though I’d never seen


the sea at all.


And


I, But realize


how many more have looked on it as we,


lovers.


Your eyes change. You


say, The sea!


from The Atlantic Monthly, 1925


Immortelle


by Bliss Carman


My glorious enchantress,


She went in silken hose,


With swaying hop and curving lip


And little tilted nose,


As full of fragrant fire


As any English rose.


Her voice across the morning,


Like olden balladry


Or magic notes from woodland throats,


It laid a spell on me


As wondrous as the west wind


And haunting as the sea.


She might have walked with Chaucer


A-jesting all the way,


Her figure trim a joy to him,


Her beauty like the day,


With that unfailing spirit


Which nothing can dismay.


Her heart was full of caring,


Her eyes were touched with dream.


In happy birth, in noble worth,


I thought that she did seem


As fair as Kentish roses


And rich as Devon cream.


I loved her airy carriage,


Her bearing clean and proud,


When glad and fond she looked beyond


The plaudits of the crowd,


Or when in prayer or sorrow


Her comely head was bowed.


I loved her eerie piping


Of measures without name.


Wild as a faun at rosy dawn,


Out of the crowd she came


To breathe upon old altars


A fresh untroubled flame.


I loved her lyric ardor,


Her chosen words and dress,


Her dryad’s face, her yielding grace,


Her glowing waywardness,


Her deep adoring passion


No careless eye would guess,


And all the while as lovely


As early daffodils,


When woodland Spring comes blossoming


Among the western hills,


And from her trilling garments


A mystic glory spills.


O sorceress of raptures


Beyond the dream of art,


be still our guide to walk beside


And choose the better part –


Thou lyric of enchantment!


Thou flower of Nature’s heart!


from The Atlantic Monthly, 1927


The Bestiary


by Lillian White Spencer


Unicorn


In pale moon fields the unicorn,


Crowned by his diamond-piercing horn,


Is hunted, though with poor success.


Man’s trespass he will not endure.


Woman, to tame him, must be pure.


Alas! This causes awkwardness.


Sea Serpent


Through hoary legend and old rhyme


He swims Atlantic tides of time.


Andromeda was once his prey,


And rumor says to Jonah he


Showed depths of hospitality,


And that he sails the blue to-day.


Scapegoat


He was the ancient Hebrews’ friend


That to the desert they would send


With all their sins for company,


While, good and dull, they stayed behind.


The emissary did not mind:


"Why, these are pleasure trips," said he.


Salamander


About the blacksmith’s red forge dance


Elves whom King Francis First of France


Bore on his shield. And, leaping higher,


Around the family hearth they flit.


But men grow bald if on them spit


These glowing scarlet sprites of fire.


Scylla


Twelve-footed, with a puppy’s whine,


On sea salts only did she dine


(Homer himself has told us this).


Thrusting her six heads through the wave


She snatched up sailors to her cave,


And had for neighbor Charybdis.


Pegasus


White-pinioned steed whose flight is far –


To realms beyond the utmost star,


Where is your glory soaring now?


Here lies a feather from your wing;


There, in your hoofprint, flowers spring;


But men have chained you to a plough.


… [Spencer also writes stanzas on a gargoyle, the herd of Diomedes, porphyrions


and centaurs.]


Griffin


This lion-eagle’s flaming breast


Guards in the sun his golden nest


And orbs of fire strike thieves dead.


So, to his treasure, men are blind –


Still . . . one or two declare him kind;


Poets can charm him, it is said.


Phoenix


High-eyried on an Eden palm,


His gold wings dripping sweetest balm,


One sings with everlasting breath


Whom Eve sought vainly to entice. . . .


Now, nowhere save in paradise,


Dwells Beauty free from taint of death.


Biographical Note: "Hunting through mythology, astronomy and the classics, Lynn


White Spencer has collected a menagerie the likes of which were never seen on sea or land


– and we include Noah’s."


from the Atlantic Monthly, 1929


Black Songs


by Nancy Byrd Turner


[There are three "Black Songs" altogether; all are in dialect. This is a


reprinting of the one that is a sonnet, entitled "Black Cat."]


Don’t never cross a road what a black cat cross –


‘T ain’t nothin’ but sorrow, ‘t ain’t nothin’ but loss.


Brindle cat, spotted cat, dem’s all right;


Safety in a yaller cat, blessin’ in a white;


But, de black cat ructious, wid a bristle in his tail,


He fotchin’ for de Debble, and he better not fail.


De black cat travel wid his belly in de dus’;


He gwine whar he gwine, and he gwine kase he mus’.


Black cat, black cat – when he cross yo’ track,


No matter where you gwine,


Toa dippin’ or a dyin’,


No matter whar you hurryin’,


To a marryin’ or a buryin’ –


You


better turn back!


Biographical Note: "Nancy Byrd Turner achieved deserved reputation by writing the


one poem in celebration of Lindburgh’s flight to Paris which was worthy of the


events, and of poetry."


[Note: the poem referred to in this note, entitled


"The Ballad of Lucky Lindbergh," was collected by Turner in Star in a Well


(New York: Dodd, Mead, 1935), pp. 154-157. That volume also collects eight dialect poems,


including "The Black Cat."]

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