Monday, December 10, 2012
The Midges
George Sterling (1869-1926), "The Midges," in The House of Orchids and Other Poems (San Francisco: A.M. Robertson, 1911), pp. 124-125:
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Alcon, the wood-god, wandering his realm,
Found his son Astries in the meadowland
At sunset, squatted on a fallen pine
And much intent upon a swarm of gnats.
To whom the godling: "Father, I have stayed
This hour to wonder at yon tiny folk,
Who dart, and hum, and make so much a-do,
Mad with the sunlight. What it is they seek
And whom they praise, and why, I do not know;
But as the hour grows old, and twilight hills
Put on the purple, this I seeāthat they
With wilder zeal do dash this way and that,
And where each in a foot of space had range,
Now flits he two, and shriller grows the cry,
Larger the host, and greater its concern.
Dost note?" Whereat brown Alcon plucked a root
And beat it on the pine, and briefly spake:
"Aye! aye! they call it 'progress'!" And the sun
Sank on the forest, and the night was chill.