POEM

Octopus

by Arthur Clement Hilton

Poem

Posted November 24, 2000 · Issue 91


Strange beauty, eight-limbed and eight-handed,
       Whence camest to dazzle our eyes?
With thy bosom bespangled and banded
       With the hues of the seas and the skies;
Is thy home European or Asian,
       O mystical monster marine?
Part molluscous and partly crustacean,
       Betwixt and between.

Wast thou born to the sound of sea trumpets,
       Hast thou eaten and drunk to excess
Of the sponges - thy muffins and crumpets;
       Of the seaweed - thy mustard and cress?
Wast thou nurtured in caverns of coral,
       Remote from reproof or restraint?
Art thou innocent, art thou immoral,
       Sinburnian or Saint?

Lithe limbs, curling free, as a creeper
       That creeps in a desolate place,
To enroll and envelop the sleeper
       In a silent and stealthy embrace,
Cruel beak craning forward to bite us,
       Our juices to drain and to drink,
Or to whelm us in waves of Cocytus,
       Indelible ink!

O breast, that 'twere rapture to writhe on!
       O arms, 'twere delicious to feel
Clinging close with the crush of the Python,
       When she maketh her murderous meal!
In thy eightfold embraces enfolden,
       Let our empty existence escape;
Give us death that is glorious and golden,
       Crushed all out of shape!

Ah! thy red lips, lascivious and luscious,
       With death in their amorous kiss,
Cling round us, and clasp us, and crush us,
       With bitings of agonized bliss;
We are sick with the poison of pleasure,
       Dispense us the potion of pain;
Ope thy mouth to its uttermost measure
       And bite us again!


Arthur Clement Hilton, a poet, parodist, and clergyman, was born in 1851. In 1872, while at St. John's College, Cambridge, he published The Light Green, a volume of verse parodies. Hilton was ordained a priest in 1875, received his M.A. from Cambridge in 1876, and died suddenly in April 1877. His work was not published until 1902.
Julia Kuhl has done illustrations for the New Yorker and the New York Times, among others. She now lives in Heidelberg, Germany, with her neurobiologist husband and is working on a comic book - a Fulika atra (coot) version of Shakespeare's Hamlet.


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