PERSPECTIVES Page Svern a. w v VLVG[F r LOS VOLADORES...Continued THE DANCE OF YUM KAX, THE HARVEST LORD I am, my Lord, of autumn-time. Frosty nights and ripened maize, Bird-swarms from the north, warm days, And hint of winter's cold are mine. Not dead but dying is the year When men send worship to my ear. My time of year is only death If one is blind to use of seed - Which is Thy masterwork indeed, Oh Lord, is Thine own gracious breath Blown earthward every year at fall To give new life and hope to all. My portion of the year is best, The promise bearing time, The months that bring the hope by which Men truly live. The rest, The months remaining out of time, Deceive, bring blight, are such As make the sweating human doubt The joys he knows in mine. They will forget, their ardor fail In holy duties owed to Thee; But in my time they surely see The wondrous truth of God. Assail Them not, poor human things, with doom, But find for mercy yet some room. Add nothing to the misery Men know, and hate, and fear; They are of Thy creation, Lord, And live alone through Thee. Now time-begins another year And Thou canst well afford A breath of time to let them live The lives they think are dear. IV. THE DANCE OF MALINCHE, THE MOTHER EARTH I am Thy creature, Lord: Thy child. Thou art my only sire, Both harsh and mild At once; my meat and my ground maize, My darkest nights, and all my days. I am Thy creature, Lord: Daughter Of Thy mind and will. I am water When Thou sendest down soft rain; Earth, when Thou art warming sun. When Thou art night, then I Am dark; When day, Thy child is my light. Thou mak'st a park Out of Thyself, then I a tree: My all is the least part of Thee. I am that child, my Lord, Which holds The children of the earth, Their homes, their folds, Their hopes, their prayers: incense To worship Thee; defense Against the evil powers Which came From where I do not know, But to inflame The world and all Thy wards Against Thy wonder-working words. They are a bulwark for Thee, Lord, These men; Have turned evil aside Time and again; Have always turned again to see The glory which is only Thee. Thou art their maker, Lord: The One To whom they owe their lives And all they own. Their worship is that Thou, oh Lord, Art Him alone to be adored. They are of Thee, oh Lord, A part. Aside from Thee they know Not flesh, not heart, Not bodies, nor reflect Thy face, Nor life, nor Thee. Now show' them grace. V. THE DANCE OF ITZAMMA, CHIEFTAN OF THE DEITIE Idea of the deity arose In man's most powerful impotency: He could not aim the lightning's dart; could see Volcano's fire and molten rock disclose Some things more powerful than he'd suppose, What with his tiny fire for cookery, And woven grass to strain a bit of sea, And all the little things that mankind-knows. We are the storied legend sung by night Through tortures in the minds of certain men. We are the fresh-found myths in each man's heart Through which into that chamber comes some light We are a key for doors tight-locked again, We are a poem, we are a race apart. We are the legend, the lively myth, the dream That shakes them in their thoughtful waking hours When they become aware of souls in flowers And take the holy earth in new esteem, Grow knowing in the power of a beam From sun or moon. We are the goad, the stimulus For those who'll urge; a drug for those who will us So. For softness, a sigh; for some, a scream. The stuff of deity is always new, Like mountain streams that, running, cleanse their beds. The stuff of deity is never old, Though more antique than time. It comes on cue Of deepest thoughts that rattle human heads And makes them wondering, instead of bold. We are a crystal mirror which reflects The brightness of what is by all men known, The endlessness of what they do not own. The image is but brief, for man corrects His sight and learns the more, suspects There is still some he has not learned, And credits us with wisdom quite unearned: We are a man-made mirror which reflects. The knowledge that he was never ours, And what he does not know is unknown by us. We are the echoes of a seeking voice Which cried in an infinity of powers; But what he listens to was never blown by us Upon the bearing wind: "Ye men, rejoice!" This echo that he hears is his own choice: The earth survives because it is the earth. But when he is assured of this, his mirth Laughs out in merry festival, gives birth To us again, gives gods new lives. Rejoice, ye prayerful men: the earth survives.