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<br/>
<h2> LUI ET ELLE </h2>
<p>She is large and matronly<br/>
And rather dirty,<br/>
A little sardonic-looking, as if domesticity had<br/>
driven her to it.<br/>
<br/>
Though what she does, except lay four eggs at<br/>
random in the garden once a year<br/>
And put up with her husband,<br/>
I don't know.<br/>
<br/>
She likes to eat.<br/>
<br/>
She hurries up, striding reared on long uncanny<br/>
legs,<br/>
When food is going.<br/>
Oh yes, she can make haste when she likes.<br/>
<br/>
She snaps the soft bread from my hand in great<br/>
mouthfuls,<br/>
Opening her rather pretty wedge of an iron,<br/>
pristine face<br/>
Into an enormously wide-beaked mouth<br/>
Like sudden curved scissors,<br/>
And gulping at more than she can swallow, and<br/>
working her thick, soft tongue,<br/>
And having the bread hanging over her chin.<br/>
<br/>
O Mistress, Mistress,<br/>
Reptile mistress,<br/>
Your eye is very dark, very bright,<br/>
And it never softens<br/>
Although you watch.<br/>
<br/>
She knows,<br/>
She knows well enough to come for food,<br/>
Yet she sees me not;<br/>
Her bright eye sees, but not me, not anything,<br/>
Sightful, sightless, seeing and visionless,<br/>
Reptile mistress.<br/>
<br/>
Taking bread in her curved, gaping, toothless<br/>
mouth,<br/>
She has no qualm when she catches my finger in<br/>
her steel overlapping gums,<br/>
But she hangs on, and my shout and my shrinking<br/>
are nothing to her,<br/>
She does not even know she is nipping me with<br/>
her curved beak.<br/>
Snake-like she draws at my finger, while I drag<br/>
it in horror away.<br/>
<br/>
Mistress, reptile mistress,<br/>
You are almost too large, I am almost frightened.<br/>
He is much smaller,<br/>
Dapper beside her,<br/>
And ridiculously small.<br/>
<br/>
Her laconic eye has an earthy, materialistic look,<br/>
His, poor darling, is almost fiery.<br/>
<br/>
His wimple, his blunt-prowed face,<br/>
His low forehead, his skinny neck, his long,<br/>
scaled, striving legs,<br/>
So striving, striving,<br/>
Are all more delicate than she,<br/>
And he has a cruel scar on his shell.<br/>
<br/>
Poor darling, biting at her feet,<br/>
Running beside her like a dog, biting her earthy,<br/>
splay feet,<br/>
Nipping her ankles,<br/>
Which she drags apathetic away, though without<br/>
retreating into her shell.<br/>
<br/>
Agelessly silent,<br/>
And with a grim, reptile determination,<br/>
Cold, voiceless age-after-age behind him,<br/>
serpents' long obstinacy<br/>
Of horizontal persistence.<br/>
<br/>
Little old man<br/>
Scuffling beside her, bending down, catching his<br/>
opportunity,<br/>
Parting his steel-trap face, so suddenly, and<br/>
seizing her scaly ankle,<br/>
And hanging grimly on,<br/>
Letting go at last as she drags away,<br/>
And closing his steel-trap face.<br/>
<br/>
His steel-trap, stoic, ageless, handsome face.<br/>
Alas, what a fool he looks in this scuffle.<br/>
<br/>
And how he feels it!<br/>
<br/>
The lonely rambler, the stoic, dignified stalker<br/>
through chaos,<br/>
The immune, the animate,<br/>
Enveloped in isolation,<br/>
Forerunner.<br/>
Now look at him!<br/>
<br/>
Alas, the spear is through the side of his isolation.<br/>
His adolescence saw him crucified into sex,<br/>
Doomed, in the long crucifixion of desire, to seek<br/>
his consummation beyond himself.<br/>
Divided into passionate duality,<br/>
He, so finished and immune, now broken into<br/>
desirous fragmentariness,<br/>
Doomed to make an intolerable fool of himself<br/>
In his effort toward completion again.<br/>
<br/>
Poor little earthy house-inhabiting Osiris,<br/>
The mysterious bull tore him at adolescence into<br/>
pieces,<br/>
And he must struggle after reconstruction,<br/>
ignominiously.<br/>
<br/>
And so behold him following the tail<br/>
Of that mud-hovel of his slowly-rambling spouse,<br/>
Like some unhappy bull at the tail of a cow,<br/>
But with more than bovine, grim, earth-dank<br/>
persistence,<br/>
Suddenly seizing the ugly ankle as she stretches<br/>
out to walk,<br/>
Roaming over the sods,<br/>
Or, if it happen to show, at her pointed, heavy tail<br/>
Beneath the low-dropping back-board of her shell.<br/>
<br/>
Their two shells like doomed boats bumping,<br/>
Hers huge, his small;<br/>
Their splay feet rambling and rowing like<br/>
paddles,<br/>
And stumbling mixed up in one another,<br/>
In the race of love—<br/>
Two tortoises,<br/>
She huge, he small.<br/>
<br/>
She seems earthily apathetic,<br/>
And he has a reptile's awful persistence.<br/>
<br/>
I heard a woman pitying her, pitying the Mère<br/>
Tortue.<br/>
While I, I pity Monsieur.<br/>
"He pesters her and torments her," said the<br/>
woman.<br/>
How much more is <i>he</i> pestered and tormented,<br/>
say I.<br/>
<br/>
What can he do?<br/>
He is dumb, he is visionless,<br/>
Conceptionless.<br/>
<br/>
His black, sad-lidded eye sees but beholds not<br/>
As her earthen mound moves on,<br/>
But he catches the folds of vulnerable, leathery<br/>
skin,<br/>
Nail-studded, that shake beneath her shell,<br/>
And drags at these with his beak,<br/>
Drags and drags and bites,<br/>
While she pulls herself free, and rows her dull<br/>
mound along.<br/></p>
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