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Home  »  Poetry: A Magazine of Verse  »  Ezra Pound

Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.

The Fish and the Shadow

Ezra Pound

THE SALMON-TROUT drifts in the stream,

The soul of the salmon-trout floats over the stream

Like a little wafer of light.

The salmon moves in the sun-shot, bright, shallow sea.

……

As light as the shadow of the fish

that falls through the water,

She came into the large room by the stair.

Yawning a little she came with the sleep still upon her.

“I’m just from bed. The sleep is still in my eyes.

Come. I have had a long dream.”

And I: “That wood?

And two springs have passed us!”

“Not so far—no, not so far now.

There is a place—but no one else knows it—

A field in a valley …

“qu’ieu sui avinen

Ieu lo sai.”

She must speak of the time

Of Arnaut de Mareuil, I thought, “qu’ieu sui avinen.”

Light as the shadow of the fish

That falls through the pale green water.