Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister
- I
- GR-R-R—there go, my heart's abhorrence!
- Water your damned flower-pots, do!
- If hate killed men, Brother Lawrence,
- God's blood, would not mine kill you!
- What? your myrtle-bush wants trimming?
- Oh, that rose has prior claims—
- Needs its leaden vase filled brimming?
- Hell dry you up with its flames!
- II
- At the meal we sit together:
- Salve tibi! I must hear
- Wise talk of the kind of weather,
- Sort of season, time of year:
- Not a plenteous cork-crop: scarcely
- Dare we hope oak-galls, I doubt:
- What's the Latin name for "parsley"?
- What's the Greek name for Swine's Snout?
- III
- Whew! We'll have our platter burnished,
- Laid with care on our own sheld!
- With a fire-new spoon we're furnished,
- And a goblet for oneself,
- Rinsed like something sacrificial
- Ere 'tis fit to touch our chaps—
- Marked with L. for our initial!
- (He-he! There his lily snaps!)
- IV
- Saint, forsooth! While brown Dolores
- Squats outside the Convent bank
- With Sanchicha, telling stories,
- Steeping tresses in the tank,
- Blue-black, lustrous, thick like horsehairs,
- —Can't I see his dead eye glow,
- Bright as 'twere a Barbary corsair's?
- (That is, if he'd let it show!)
- V
- When he finishes refection,
- Knife and fork he never lays
- Cross-wise to my recollection,
- As do I, in Jesu's praise.
- I the Trinity illustrate,
- Drinking watered orange-pulp—
- In three sips the Arian frustrate;
- While he drains his at one gulp.
- VI
- Oh, those melons? If he's able
- We're to have a feast! so nice!
- One goes to the Abbot's table,
- All of us get each a slice.
- How go on your flowers? None double?
- Not one fruit-sort can you spy?
- Strange!—And I, too, at such trouble,
- Keep them close-nipped on the sly!
- VII
- There's a great text in Galatians,
- Once you trip on it, entails
- Twenty-nine distinct damnations,
- One sure, if another fails:
- If I trip him just a-dying,
- Sure of heaven as sure can be,
- Spin him round and send him flying
- Off to hell, a Manichee?
- VIII
- Or my scrofulous French novel
- On gray paper with blunt type!
- Simply glance at it, you grovel
- Hand and foot in Belial's gripe:
- If I double down its pages
- At the woeful sixteenth print,
- When he gathers his greengages,
- Ope a sieve and slip it in't?
- IX
- Or, there's Satan!—one might venture
- Pledge one's soul to him, yet leave
- Such a flaw in the indenture
- As he'd miss till, past retrieve,
- Blasted lay that rose-acacia
- We're so proud of! Hy, Zy, Hine.
- 'St, there's Vespers! Plena gratiâ
- Ave, Virgo! Gr-r-r—you swine!
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