ARGUMENT

This is of Lilith, by her Hebrew name

Lady of Night: she, in the delicate frame

that was of woman after, did unite

herself with Adam in unblest delight;

who, uncapacious of that dreadful love,

begat on her not majesty, as Jove,

but the worm-brood of terrors unconfest

that chose henceforth, as their avoided nest,

the mire-fed writhen thicket of the mind.

She, monsterward from that embrace declined,

could change her to Chimera and inspire

doubt of his garden-state, exciting higher

the arrowy impulse to dim descried

o’erhuman bliss, as after, on the wide

way of his travail, with enticing strain

and hint of nameless things reveal’d, a bane

haunted, the fabled siren, and was seen

later as Lamia and Melusine,

and whatsoe’er of serpent-wives is feign’d,

or malice of the vampire-witch that drain’d

fresh blood of fresh-born babes, a wicked blast:

faces of fear, beheld along the past

and in the folk’s scant fireside lore misread,

of her that is the august and only dread,

close-dwelling, in the house of birth and death,

and closer, in the secrets of our breath -

or love occult, whose smile eludes our sight

in her flung hair that is the starry night.