'PE R SPE CT I VE S Page Pine 'PERSPECTI VES Page Five FALL PLOWING Now must I till again the fallow field After an idle year. For I have learned No rest renews the green where grass has burned Or solaces a wound which should have healed. After the empty year this land should yield A more abundant harvest than before: The earth is fertile, and because it bore No fruit in this past year, its mould is filled With essences of life. The idle year Goes unregretted, and the unsown grain Will come to life in later threshings here. The crop which is to be assuages pain; The grain which should have been, but was not sown, Will call the richer harvest part its own. -Marguerite Graham CHARLESTON HARBOUR The docks of Charleston, a hazy crimson in August twilight. Negro voices lingering softly in the evening air. A melodious softness which seems a very part of the summer dusk. In perfect harmony. Voices - From the cobblestones to the magnolias . . The dock worker swings homeward, feet shuffling over worn cobblestone; The scent of magnolia mingles with the odor of sweat-saturated blue jean - Blue jean which spreads across broad backs and rippling black shoulders ... While dark waters filter in and out, lapping silent wharves, Night finds the cobblestones, the melody and the magnolias. And the sweat of day lingers on Charleston docks. -Charles Doughtie CONFIRMED DATA DETAILED FOR THE LAYMAN On the quiet nights Subdued by clouds, The mist figures, umbrellaed 'gainst the element of rain, essay my door. Their feet, measured to the Cobbles of my path, impression The spread of darkness Within, munching of the aged clan, Sympathetic tread of mind, Observes the pane of day. Without, the brown-barked trees, dull-haired with sibilent whisperings Leaf the ephemeral countenance at night And share with raucous crow The periphery at dawn. -F. A. P. NO MORE A LOVELY VISION No more a lovely vision do I see. I rend the silent night with frantic cries, I spin the shining crystal endlessly, But now no splendid vision meets my eyes. A ringing chorus, now unheard, I wait, And agrily I shed my salty tears; But though I early send my prayers and late, No mighty music falls upon my ears. The dreams that once I dreamed are dim with rust; My sobs rear high upon the evening air- I haunt the house where beauty sleeps in dust, But find no more a lovely vision there. I am the banished soul, who, screaming, tries For one more happy glimpse of paradise. -Syvlia Huxtable VISION -1941 Beyond the staves of individual hours, Here was this city lying at our feet- Those ancient citadels, those climbing.towers, Timeless and blessed,,and the great, swift peace That came up to this hill by the great wind, And rose up to a life and you and I The tiny hours that marked our breathing's depth and breadth and frequency Fell sudden at the gust of one wind's breath As far below we watched for Time's slow mind To analyse and sudden to explain. But Time stood still, unanswering and unanswered And your own low voice faded into nothing And I reached for your hand, but could not find you. And the red lightning split the little clouds And a quick thunder came out of the earth And broke the little towers of timelessness And broke the little citadels of timelessness And broke the little temples of benediction Wih a power that even was like love As sudden and unwaiting. Since, I have called swift wind voices after you, But you did not answer. And I have gone down the hill and up the hill And down the hill and up the hill again But could not find you. Only I and the wind are left now on this slope And all around the broken citadels The wind goes out to call upon your name, But you do not answer. And all that ever loved are silent now And all that ancient glory turned to dust. -Dorothy Farnan BLACK GANG Piston thrust on steel chocks Driving forward through green foam In an ecstacy of rhythm Singing with the power hum Of oil on steel And sliding easily on the Blood of the rhythm makers .... -Bill Robbins