Right from the start he is dressed in his best - his blacks and his whites
Little Fauntleroy - quiffed and glossy2,
A Sunday suit, a wedding natty3 get-up,
Standing4 in dunged straw
Under cobwebby beams, near the mud wall,
Half of him legs,
Shining-eyed, requiring nothing more
But that mother's milk come back often.
Everything else is in order, just as it is.
Let the summer skies hold off, for the moment.
This is just as he wants it.
A little at a time, of each new thing, is best.
Too much and too sudden is too frightening -
When I block the light, a bulk from space,
To let him in to his mother for a suck,
He bolts a yard or two, then freezes,
Staring from every hair in all directions,
Ready for the worst, shut up in his hopeful religion,
A little syllogism5
With a wet blue-reddish muzzle6, for God's thumb.
You see all his hopes bustling7
As he reaches between the worn rails towards
The topheavy oven of his mother.
He trembles to grow, stretching his curl-tip tongue -
What did cattle ever find here
To make this dear little fellow
So eager to prepare himself?
He is already in the race, and quivering to win -
His new purpled eyeball swivel-jerks
In the elbowing push of his plans.
Hungry people are getting hungrier,
Butchers developing expertise8 and markets,
But he just wobbles his tail - and glistens9
Within his dapper profile
Unaware10 of how his whole lineage
Has been tied up.
He shivers for feel of the world licking his side.
He is like an ember - one glow
Of lighting11 himself up
With the fuel of himself, breathing and brightening.
Soon he'll plunge12 out, to scatter13 his seething14 joy,
To be present at the grass,
To be free on the surface of such a wideness,
To find himself himself. To stand. To moo.
Little Fauntleroy - quiffed and glossy2,
A Sunday suit, a wedding natty3 get-up,
Standing4 in dunged straw
Under cobwebby beams, near the mud wall,
Half of him legs,
Shining-eyed, requiring nothing more
But that mother's milk come back often.
Everything else is in order, just as it is.
Let the summer skies hold off, for the moment.
This is just as he wants it.
A little at a time, of each new thing, is best.
Too much and too sudden is too frightening -
When I block the light, a bulk from space,
To let him in to his mother for a suck,
He bolts a yard or two, then freezes,
Staring from every hair in all directions,
Ready for the worst, shut up in his hopeful religion,
A little syllogism5
With a wet blue-reddish muzzle6, for God's thumb.
You see all his hopes bustling7
As he reaches between the worn rails towards
The topheavy oven of his mother.
He trembles to grow, stretching his curl-tip tongue -
What did cattle ever find here
To make this dear little fellow
So eager to prepare himself?
He is already in the race, and quivering to win -
His new purpled eyeball swivel-jerks
In the elbowing push of his plans.
Hungry people are getting hungrier,
Butchers developing expertise8 and markets,
But he just wobbles his tail - and glistens9
Within his dapper profile
Unaware10 of how his whole lineage
Has been tied up.
He shivers for feel of the world licking his side.
He is like an ember - one glow
Of lighting11 himself up
With the fuel of himself, breathing and brightening.
Soon he'll plunge12 out, to scatter13 his seething14 joy,
To be present at the grass,
To be free on the surface of such a wideness,
To find himself himself. To stand. To moo.