Page Four Q'E SPE TIVES PAgForPRSETVE SELECTIONS . *.By Claire Chamberlain INSATIETY Through the clear night window moonlight softly comes, And moving music weaves among half-shadows of the room Where roses, leaning from their bowl, breathe fragrance on the darkly gleaming wood Yet vague wanting haunts the moonlight's unfelt touch; A spiral rising yearning underlies the music; And the fragrance of the roses is but a ghost-caress to wood untouched by petals. BOOMERANG I thought you enigmatical and wise. With condescension granted few You taught discernment to my eyes -Till now they see through even you. CONTRAST SUMMER'S END - TOBACCO FARM My mind was the snail, through slow time Slowly building its intricate, secret shell. Yours, like the frost, hung up quick shining icicles That gave a crystal tinkling as they fell. DINNER-BOOTH We should have kept on walking down the street, past the windows, amid the hurrying people, To part the usual way, and meet again some other time for talk of friends and books and what new things our lives have brought. You shouldn't have brought me here Where this soft-lit section of the floating dining talk and music Holds and mingles essences of our two selves, Like some rich blended wine... More dangerous than touch of hand or lips Are these suspended moments When I look deep into the widened darkness of your eyes And held by the movement of your voice, Listening to your rarest thoughts, Am drawn down vistas of your mind almost beyond recall. KITCHEN DRAMA Behind your cigarette you sit and link Casual words with great felicity. I, wielding a dishmop at the sink, Retire under domesticity. By lantern light and the light of the August moon We handed the last stick in and left the wagon The patient mule wrinkled his harassed hide, Still feeling the sting of sweat and flies After the sun was down. The lantern flickered and its oily smoke Scented the air and touched our gummy hands. The last barn in, the last leaves on the stick. The weary men, mopping their sweating foreheads, Dropped to the ground and looked at the leaves above. Good crop. Only a few leaves rusty, Speckled and curled with the heat. Stoop and rub your hands in the sand, then turn the wagon around and head for home. Only a few weeks more and the sticky mass will be substantial things like coats and new shoes. They're changing books at school again this year; shell out another bill for a fountain pen. The creak of the wagon rhythmic against the night; Light as early morning, almost, under a pale full moon. So we ate supper gratefully in quiet, Then stretched out fully clothed and watched the bats wheel past. -Marguerite Graham I