William Bliss Carman

Here you will find the Long Poem A Creature Catechism of poet William Bliss Carman

A Creature Catechism

I
Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the sea?


LORD, said a flying fish, 
Below the foundations of storm 
We feel the primal wish 
Of the earth take form. 
 
Through the dim green water-fire 
We see the red sun loom, 
And the quake of a new desire 
Takes hold on us down in the gloom. 
 
No more can the filmy drift 
Nor draughty currents buoy 
Our whim to its bent, nor lift 
Our heart to the height of its joy. 
 
When sheering down to the Line 
Come polar tides from the North, 
Thy silver folk of the brine 
Must glimmer and forth. 
 
Down in the crumbling mill 
Grinding eternally, 
We are the type of thy will 
To the tribes of the sea. 
 
II
Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the air

Lord, said a butterfly, 
Out of a creeping thing, 
For days in the dust put by, 
The spread of a wing 
 
Emerges with pulvil of gold 
On a tissue of green and blue, 
And there is thy purpose of old 
Unspoiled and fashioned anew. 
 
Ephemera, ravellings of sky 
And shreds of the Northern light, 
We age in a heart-beat and die 
Under the eaves of night. 
 
What if the small breath quail, 
Or cease at a touch of the frost? 
Not a tremor of joy shall fail, 
Nor a pulse be lost. 
 
This fluttering life, never still, 
Survives to oblivion?s despair. 
We are the type of thy will 
To the tribes of the air. 
 
III
Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the field?

Lord, said a maple seed, 
Though well we are wrapped and bound, 
We are the first to give heed, 
When thy bugles give sound. 
 
We banner thy House of the Hills 
With green and vermilion and gold, 
When the floor of April thrills 
With the myriad stir of the mould, 
 
And her hosts for migration prepare. 
We too have the veined twin-wings, 
Vans for the journey of air. 
With the urge of a thousand springs 
 
Pent for a germ in our side, 
We perish of joy, being dumb, 
That our race may be and abide 
For aeons to come. 
 
When rivulet answers to rill 
In snow-blue valleys unsealed, 
We are the type of thy will 
To the tribes of the field. 
 
IV
Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the ground?

Lord, when the time is ripe, 
Said a frog through the quiet rain, 
We take up the silver pipe 
For the pageant again. 
 
When the melting wind of the South 
Is over meadow and pond, 
We draw the breath of thy mouth, 
Reviving the ancient bond. 
 
Then must we fife and declare 
The unquenchable joy of earth,? 
Testify hearts still dare, 
Signalize beauty?s worth. 
 
Then must we rouse and blow 
On the magic reed once more, 
Till the glad earth-children know 
Not a thing to deplore. 
 
When rises the marshy trill 
To the soft spring night?s profound, 
We are the type of thy will 
To the tribes of the ground. 
 
V
Soul, what art thou in the tribes of the earth?

Lord, said an artist born, 
We leave the city behind 
For the hills of open morn, 
For fear of our kind. 
 
Our brother they nailed to a tree 
For sedition; they bully and curse 
All those whom love makes free. 
Yet the very winds disperse 
 
Rapture of birds and brooks, 
Colours of sea and cloud,? 
Beauty not learned of books, 
Truth that is never loud. 
 
We model our joy into clay, 
Or help it with line and hue, 
Or hark for its breath in stray 
Wild chords and new. 
 
For to-morrow can only fulfil 
Dreams which to-day have birth; 
We are the type of thy will 
To the tribes of the earth.