Complaint Of A Poet Manqu� By Aldous Leonard Huxley

  We judge by appearance merely:
    If I can’t think strangely, I can at least look queerly.
    So I grew the hair so long on my head
    That my mother wouldn’t know me,
    Till a woman in a night-club said,
    As I was passing by,
    “Hullo, here comes Salome …”

    I looked in the dirty gilt-edged glass,
    And, oh Salome; there I was – 
    Positively jewelled, half a vampire,
    With the soul in my eyes hanging dizzily
    Like the gatherer of proverbial samphire
    Over the brink of the crag of sense,
    Looking down from perilous eminence
    Into a gulf of windy night.
    And there’s straw in my tempestuous hair,
    And I’m not a poet: but never despair!
    I’ll madly live the poems I shall never write.