Lament for the Waltz People

John Malcolm Brinnin

Have they at last escaped Into memoriams,
Those grandfathers who shaped This era of the drums? Where is the famous cheek With the painted sabre-cut? Where in that scenic wreck The drunken patriot?
Their scarlet interim Takes to the weeping page Where fruity memoirs dim Its mortal clay and rouge,
While on the chandelier Chopin-trimmed visions show How death in his career Strikes with a velvet blow.
The past will not behave For it is profligate,
Nursing old wounds with love,
Showing a sword, a bed,
And flowers pressed, corrupt,
In fraudulent black books;
Ah, none is so adept At pairing doves and snakes.

Nor is it penitent Where a cold vindictive gun Looks from its battlement In Nome or Darien;
For always as before,
Like the memory of France,
Wheels on our tarnished floor The old paternal dance.

University of Virginia Virginia Quarterly Review
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University of Virginia
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ISSN 2154-6932