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Vincent Millay Cycle (2010)

by Thomas Oboe Lee

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1.
1. Song of the Nations Out of Night and alarm Out of Darkness and dread, Out of old hate, Grudge and distrust, Sin and remorse, Passion and blindness; Shall come Dawn and the birds, Shall come Slacking of greed, Snapping of fear------- Love shall fold warm like a cloak Round the shuddering earth Till the sound of its woe cease. After Terrible dreams, After crying in sleep, Grief beyond thought, Twisting of hands, Tears from shut lids Wetting the pillow; Shall come Sun on the wall, Shall come sounds from the street, Children at play--- Bubbles too big blown, and dreams Filled too heavy with horror Will burst and in mist fall. Sing then, You who were dumb, Shout then Into the dark; Are we not one? Are not our hearts Hot from one fire, And in one mold cast? Out of Night and alarm, Out of Terrible dreams, Reach me your hand, This is the meaning of all that we Suffered in sleep, ---the white peace Of the waking.
2.
Daphne 00:45
2. Daphne Why do you follow me? Any moment I can be Nothing but a laurel-tree. Any moment of the chase I can leave you in my place A pink bough for your embrace. Yet if over hill and hollow Still it is your will to follow, I am off; ---to heel, Apollo!
3.
3. Never May the Fruit Be Plucked Never, never may the fruit be plucked from the bough And gathered into barrels. He that would eat of love must eat where it hangs. Though the branches bend like reeds, Though the ripe fruit splash in the grass or wrinkle on the tree, He that would eat of love may bear away from him Only what his belly can hold, Nothing in the apron, Nothing in the pockets. Never, never may the fruit be gathered from the bough And harvested in barrels. The winter of love is the cellar of empty bins, In an orchard soft with rot.
4.
Hyacinth 02:02
4. Hyacinth I am in love with him to whom the hyacinth is dearer Than I shall ever be dear. On nights when the field-mice are abroad he cannot sleep; He hears their narrow teeth at the bulbs of his hyacinths, But the gnawing at my heart he does not hear.
5.
5. Justice Denied in Massachusetts Let us abandon then our gardens and go home And sit in the sitting-room. Shall the larkspur blossom or the corn grow under this cloud? Sour to the fruitful seed Is the cold earth under this cloud, Fostering quack and weed, we have marched upon but cannot conquer; We have bent the blades of our hoes against the stalks of them. Let us go home, and sit in the sitting-room. Not in our day Shall the cloud go over and the sun rise as before, Beneficent upon us Out of the glittering bay, And the warm winds be blown inward from the sea Moving the blades of corn With a peaceful sound. Forlorn, forlorn, Stands the blue hay-rack by the empty mow. And the petals drop to the ground, Leaving the tree unfruited. The sun that warmed our stooping backs and withered the weed uprooted--- We shall not feel it again. We shall die in darkness, and be buried in the rain. What from the splendid dead We have inherited--- Furrows sweet to the grain, and the weed subdued--- See now the slug and the mildew plunder. Evil does overwhelm The larkspur and the corn; We have seen them go under. Let us sit here, sit still, Here in the sitting-room until we die; At the step of Death on the walk, rise and go; Leaving to our children’s children this beautiful doorway, And this elm, And a blighted earth to till With a broken hoe.
6.
6. This Dusky Faith Why, then, weep not, Since naught’s to weep. Too wild, too hot For a dead thing, Altered and cold, Are these long tears: Relinquishing To the sovereign force Of the pulling past What you cannot hold Is reason’s course. Wherefore, sleep. Or sleep to the rocking Rather, of this: The silver knocking Of the moon’s knuckles At the door of the night; Death here becomes Being, nor truckles To the sun, assumes Light as its light. So, too, this dusky faith In Man, transcends its death, Shines out, gains emphasis; Shorn of the tangled past, Shows its fine skull at last, Cold, lovely satellite.

credits

released December 20, 2012

Mary Hubbell, soprano
Brent Funderburk, piano

Music by Thomas Oboe Lee
Poems by Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892 - 1950)

Elebash Recital Hall
Graduate Center, CUNY
Kamilo Kratc, sound engineer and editor
August 28, 2012

© Departed Feathers Music, Inc. - BMI - 2010

Photo credit: Thomas Oboe Lee

YouTube link: youtu.be/k43XDkLj2lY

Text used by permission of Holly Peppe, Literary Executor, the Millay Society

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Thomas Oboe Lee Cambridge, Massachusetts

Thomas Oboe Lee was born in China in 1945. He lived in São Paulo, Brazil, for six years before coming to the United States in 1966. After graduating from the University of Pittsburgh, he studied composition at the New England Conservatory and Harvard University. He has been a member of the music faculty at Boston College since 1990. ... more

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