Kenneth Slessor

Here you will find the Poem Undine of poet Kenneth Slessor

Undine

IN Undine's mirror the cutpurse found 
Five candlesticks by magic drowned, 
Like boughs of silver . . . and pale as death, 
Biting his beard, till the rogue's own breath 
Shook all their gourds of fire, he stopped, 
Eyed the gilt baskets, gaped half-round . . . . 
Then down to the floor his pistol dropped . . . . 
No sound in the dark rooms . . . the clank 
Of metal and beam died fast . . . and flank 
Pressed in strange fear to Undine's bed, 
The robber stared long, and bent his head 
To that soft wave . . . then hand on silk, 
Plumbed the warm valley where nightly sank 
Undine the water-maid, caved in milk. 
And over those pools, the rogue could smell 
Rich essences globed and stoppered well 
On Undine's table . . . and row by row, 
Jars of green china foamed stiff with snow, 
And crystal trays and bottles of stone 
Bowed like black slaves to that ivory shell, 
The body of Undine . . . but Undine was gone. 
Only below the candles' gleam, 
In one small casket of waxen cream 
With sidelong eyes the thief could follow 
That rosy trough, the printed hollow 
Of Undine's finger . . . then out to the street 
He sprawled and fled . . . but still on the beam 
His pistol waited for Undine's feet!