Here you will find the Long Poem An Artist of poet Robinson Jeffers
That sculptor we knew, the passionate-eyed son of a quarryman, Who astonished Rome and Paris in his meteor youth, and then was gone, at his high tide of triumphs, Without reason or good-bye; I have seen him again lately, after twenty years, but not in Europe. In desert hills I rode a horse slack-kneed with thirst. Down a steep slope a dancing swarm Of yellow butterflies over a shining rock made me hope water. We slid down to the place, The spring was bitter but the horse drank. I imagined wearings of an old path from that wet rock Ran down the canyon; I followed, soon they were lost, I came to a stone valley in which it seemed No man nor his mount had ever ventured, you wondered whether even a vulture'd ever spread sail there. There were stones of strange form under a cleft in the far hill; I tethered the horse to a rock And scrambled over. A heap like a stone torrent, a moraine, But monstrously formed limbs of broken carving appeared in the rock-fall, enormous breasts, defaced heads Of giants, the eyes calm through the brute veils of fracture. It was natural then to climb higher and go in Up the cleft gate. The canyon was a sheer-walled crack winding at the entrance, but around its bend The walls grew dreadful with stone giants, presences growing out of the rigid precipice, that strove In dream between stone and life, intense to cast their chaos . . . or to enter and return . . . stone-fleshed, nerve-stretched Great bodies ever more beautiful and more heavy with pain, they seemed leading to some unbearable Consummation of the ecstasy . . . but there, troll among Titans, the bearded master of the place accosted me In a cold anger, a mallet in his hand, filthy and ragged. There was no kindness in that man's mind, But after he had driven me down to the entrance he spoke a little. The merciless sun had found the slot now To hide in, and lit for the wick of that stone lamp-bowl a sky almost, I thought, abominably beautiful; While our lost artist we used to admire: for now I knew him: spoke of his passion. He said, 'Marble? White marble is fit to model a snow-mountain: let man be modest. Nor bronze: I am bound to have my tool In my material, no irrelevances. I found this pit of dark-gray freestone, fine-grained, and tough enough To make sketches that under any weathering will last my lifetime? The town is eight miles off, I can fetch food and no one follows me home. I have water and a cave Here; and no possible lack of material. I need, therefore, nothing. As to companions, I make them. And models? They are seldom wanted; I know a Basque shepherd I sometimes use; and a woman of the town. What more? Sympathy? Praise? I have never desired them and also I have never deserved them. I will not show you More than the spalls you saw by accident. What I see is the enormous beauty of things, but what I attempt Is nothing to that. I am helpless toward that. It is only to form in stone the mould of some ideal humanity that might be worthy to be Under that lightning. Animalcules that God (if he were given to laughter) might omit to laugh at. Those children of my hands are tortured, because they feel,' he said, 'the storm of the outer magnificence. They are giants in agony. They have seen from my eyes The man-destroying beauty of the dawns over their notch yonder, and all the obliterating stars. But in their eyes they have peace. I have lived a little and I think Peace marrying pain alone can breed that excellence in the luckless race, might make it decent To exist at all on the star-lit stone breast. I hope,' he said, 'that when I grow old and the chisel drops, I may crawl out on a ledge of the rock and die like a wolf.' These fragments are all I can remember, These in the flare of the desert evening. Having been driven so brutally forth I never returned; Yet I respect him enough to keep his name and the place secret. I hope that some other traveller May stumble on that ravine of Titans after their maker has died. While he lives, let him alone.