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TEXT CROSS 
WITHIN THE 
BOOK ONLY 



CO 

66926 >m 

CO 



Gift of 
YALE UNIVERSITY 




With the aid of the 

ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION 

1949 



THE NEW BRITISH POETS 



By Kenneth Rexroth 

POETRY 

In What Hour 

The Phoenix and The Tortoise 

The Signature of All Things 

EDITOR 

Selected Poems of D. H. Lawrence 
California Poets 



"The 
^British 




AN ANTHOLOGY 

EDITED BY 
KENNETH REXROTH 



A NEW DIRECTIONS BOOK 



ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 

For permission to reprint the poems appearing in this 
volume acknowledgments are due to the following pub- 
lishers and periodicals, both British and American: 

Jonathan Cape Ltd., Circle, Contemporary Poetry <fc Prose ; The 
Cornbill, Andrew Dakers Ltd., Doubleday & Co., The Dublin 
Magazine, Dutton, Faber & Faber, Focus, The Fortune Press, 
TheGrey Walls Press, The Hogarth Press, Henry Holt & Co., 
Horizon, Illiterate Alfred Knopf, Leaven, John Lehmann 
Ltd., Life & Letters, The Listener, The London Mercury, The 
Macmillan Co., William McClellan, New Road, New Verse, 
The Oxford University Press, Poetry Chicago, Poetry Folios, 
Poetry London, Poetry Quarterly, Poetry Scotland, Random 
House, George Routledge Ltd., Martin Seeker & Warburg, 
The Seizin Press, Time & Tide, Transformation, 
The Viking Press. 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 

No material from this volume may be 

reprinted, broadcast or performed without permission 

in writing from its author. 



PRINTED IN ITALY 
BY THE OFFICINE TIPOGRAFICHE A. MONDADORI AT VERONA 



AS EVER - TO MY WIFE 
MARIE 

AND TO MY FRIEND 
JIM LAUGHLIN 



THE POETS 



Louis ADEANE 
KENNETH ALLOTT 
GEORGE BARKER 



JOHN BATE 296 

JOHN BAYLISS .... 13 

AUDREY BEECHAM . . . 297 

ALISON BOODSON ... 18 

GEORGE BRUCE .... 298 

BRENDA CHAMBERLAIN . 21 

ALEX COMFORT .... 24 

FRANCIS DOUGLAS DAVISON 299 

KEITH DOUGLAS ... 33 

ADAM DRINAN .... 41 

LAWRENCE DURRELL . . 44 

PATRICK EVANS .... 54 

GAVIN EWART .... 56 

G. S. ERASER 57 

ROY FULLER 63 

WREY GARDINER .... 71 

ROBERT GARIOCH ... 74 

DAVID GASCOYNE ... 75 

W. S. GRAHAM .... 85 

JOHN HEATH-STUBBS . . 87 

J. F. HBNDRY .... 90 

RAYNER HEPPENSTALL . . 93 

NIGEL HESELTINE ... 97 

SEANjBNNETT IO3 

GLYN JONES 108 

SIDNEY KBYES .... no 



JAMES KIRKUP .... 300 

LAURIE LEE in 

DEMISE LEVERTOV . . . 113 

ALUN LEWIS 118 

EMANUEL LITVTNOV . . 119 

NORMAN McCAiG ... 122 

HUGH MACDIARMID . . 124 

SORLEY MACLEAN ... 129 

JOSEPH GORDON MACLEOD 134 

CHARLES MADGE . . . 139 

Os MARRON 146 

WILLIAM MONTGOMERY . 147 

NICHOLAS MOORE ... 148 

DOUGLAS NEWTON . . . 158 

NORMAN NICHOLSON . . 160 

JULIAN ORDE 301 

PAUL POTTS 301 

F. T. PRINCE .... 167 

KATHLEEN RAINE ... 169 

HENRY REED 179 

KEIDRYCH RHYS . . . . 180 

ANNB RIDLBR .... 184 

LYNETTE ROBERTS ... 192 

W. R. RODGERS .... 195 

D. S. SAVAGE .... 207 

FRANCIS SCARFE . . . . 212 

SIDNEY GOODSIR SMITH . . 218 

WILLIAM SOUTAR ... 221 

BERNARD SPENCER . . . 227 



STEPHEN SPENDER ... 229 HENRY TREECE .... 263: 

DEREK STANFORD . . . 234 JOHN WALLER .... 267 

JULIAN SYMONS .... 237 VERNON W ATKINS . . . 270 

DYLAN THOMAS .... 241 EITHNE WILKINS ... 275 

TERENCE TILLER .... 250 GEORGE WOODCOCK . . 288 

RUTHVEN TODD ... 256 DAVID WRIGHT .... 2p5 



INTRODUCTION 

IN the early years of the world economic crisis, a group of young 
British poets came into great prominence both in England and 
America. From 1932 to 1937 they spoke for a world on the eve of 
disaster. Their success was tremendous. Everyone knows their names : 
W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender, C. Day Lewis, Louis MacNeice, and 
their friends and associates. In 1937 a change of taste, a reaction, set 
in. It was inconspicuous at first, but with the onset of universal war, 
most of the poetry being written in England was of a new and dif- 
ferent kind. At the least it was a new manner, at the best it was a 
new vision. Most of its adherents and practitioners call themselves 
Romantics. It is the purpose of this collection to represent the work 
of those British poets who have come to prominence since 1937 as 
extensively as possible. It is not a Romantic collection, in the sense of 
being weighted in favor of that tendency. I have included as wide a 
representation as I could of the English poets who were born during 
or after 1908, that is, who will be forty or under on the publication 
of this book. In addition, I have tried to give some picture of the 
extremely active Scottish literary renascence, without regard to age. 

Looking back, it seems today that the Auden circle was more a 
merchandizing co-operative than a literary school. Certainly its 
members have drifted far apart. Auden himself is now an American 
citizen. His influence in England is slight. To use Ossietsky's phrase, 
his voice sounded hollow across a frontier and ocean to his juniors 
who were sitting out die London blitz. His sympathy with Marxism, 
never too well grounded, has vanished and he has almost forgotten 
his special mythology, the Public Schoolboy, the garden party, the 
country house; and with Mr. Gerald Heard, sometime science popu- 
larizer for the B. B. C., he has become the spokesman for a pecu- 
liarly American, Hollywoodweary religiosity. Cecil Day Lewis, like 
Louis Aragon and others of that kidney, has become a conventional 
if not a popular writer. Louis MacNeice is trying desperately to cure 
himself of the bad habits of his youth, the flat, "wise," pedestrian 
writing that earned him the label of the perfect urban poet. Minor 
figures in the group, like Rex Warner, have taken to novels, or 
disappeared, or both. 

VII 



INTRODUCTION 

Only Stephen Spender has made a transition into the new period, 
and for reasons I shall discuss later, this has not been difficult for him. 
Contemporary with the Auden circle, more or less, were two other 
groups, not as well known in America, but, in their day, very in- 
fluential in England: the Cambridge metaphysicals, and the objecti- 
vists who contributed to New Verse. 

Auden's friends were mostly Oxonians. At Cambridge a group 
grew up around William Empson, the author of Seven Types of 
Ambiguity, which included Charles Madge, Richard Eberhart and 
Kathleen Raine. There was something peculiarly American about 
them, something a little barbarous and Poe-esque. The Auden circle 
were very British, and seemed to believe that poetry could best be 
written from an attitude, a very British attitude exemplified by 
Byron's satires, Prior, Peacock, Clough, Lear, Benson, Calverly, 
Belloc, and the authors of the best dirty limericks. At utilitarian 
Cambridge, on the other hand, there is more than a suspicion that 
they believed that you could write poetry from a formula, and that, 
if you searched hard enough and with scientific methods learned 
from Ogden and Richards, you were sure to find the formula, 
wha^t with all our modern advantages. Empson's own poetry, when 
it is "ambiguous," is like nothing so much as something vast built 
with an Erector set, complex, insensitive and dispassionate. At his best 
he actually resembles Auden when he is at his best, simple, wistful, 
and conscience ridden again, not unlike Arthur Hugh Clough. In 
the medium he and his group tried to develop, the American meta- 
physicals fostered by John Crowe Ransom are incomparably bet- 
ter. It is significant that the American poet, Richard Eberhart, who 
was at Cambridge for a while, is the best poet to have come under 
Empson's influence. He, certainly, does not believe that it is possible 
to discover a recipe for writing like John Donne. Another exception 
is Kathleen Raine, the youngest of the group, who has moved on 
and grown and is one of the leading poets of the new period. 

Geoffrey Grigson, the editor of New Verse, is usually looked on as 
the founder and leader of British Objectivism, which needs careful 
distinction from the American school of the same name. American 
Objectivism, of which I happened to be an unwilling leader, took 

VIII 



INTRODUCTION 

off from William Carlos Williams, Pound, the Stein of Tender But- 
tons, Yvor Winters' early work, and a variety of French writers 
Cendrars, Apollinaire, Cocteau, MacOrlan, Deltiel, Soupault, and 
certain phases of Aragon, Tzara and Eluard. I suppose it could be 
called the last gasp of literary cubism. Like cubism, it depended far 
more on an entranced sense of hyper-reality, a sort of hallucination 
of fact, than on its fancied objectivity. There was nothing of this in 
British Objectivism, neither the learning, nor the revolt, nor the 
international connections, nor the rarefied aesthetics. They just put 
it down as it came. The results are often startling. It is difficult to 
understand, sometimes, what Grigson himself thought he was getting 
at with his inventories of seascapes and city streets one expects 
to find a notice of a Sheriff's Sale at the end of the poem. At its best 
this tendency produced writing somewhat like MacNeice's flattest 
exercises but with more things in it. Constituting as it did a technique 
of discretion and suppression, the flat, tightly cemented armor plate 
of stuff sometimes accumulated quite a head of steam underneath. 
Kenneth Allott and Bernard Smith, for instance, really have a lot 
of banked fire in them. Grigson did teach many to write simply, 
lucidly, without posturing or trickery, which is all to the good. His 
influence on younger men like Ruthven Todd has been nothing but 
salutary. 

Julian Symons' Twentieth Century Verse was another focus for tenden- 
cies indistinguishable from the Auden circle, but which included a 
somewhat different set of people. Symons himself, and Roy Fuller 
both of whom have changed considerably since those days are 
the most important members of this group. 

Fuller is one poet to whom the term classical can be applied with 
justice. His work has a clarity, order, and succinctness which is ex- 
ceptional in present day England. At the same time he is personally 
involved in his expression, in the same way as the best Romantic 
poets. 

Independent of all this, there was lightning in the mountains to the 
North Hugh Macdiarmid and the Scottish Renascence, a completely 
separate phenomenon in, for cultural purposes at least, a separate 

IX 



INTRODUCTION 

country. It is surprising how little influence the work of a major 
poet and hyperactive publicist like Macdiarmid has had in England. 

In 1948, the majority of British poets under forty consider themselves 
Romantics, and look on the preceding period as one of Classicism. 
The movement, which has certainly been a revolution, and which 
has very nearly swept all before it, is known officially as Romanti- 
cism. I realize that everybody knows what Romanticism and Classi- 
cism mean, but I am very suspicious of the words. They did not 
come into existence until well on in the Romantic period. Horace 
and Virgil did not look on Catullus as a Romantic. I think it is as 
misleading to describe Auden as a Classicist as it is so to describe 
Byron. It is better to try and find out what happened. 

On the eve of the second war, the intellectual world generally was 
still dominated by the gospel of artistic impersonality, inherited from 
the nineteenth century "scientific," "exact aesthetic," and the op- 
posed cult of artistic irresponsibility, "Art for Art's Sake." Mallarme, 
Valery, Cubism, much Marxism, the dubious "Thomism" of M. 
Maritain, T.S. Eliot, Laura Riding, Robert Graves, I. A.Richards, 
most Surrealists it was almost universally taught and believed that 
the work of art was not communicative, was not "about anything." 
Instead, it should be approached empirically, from a utilitarian basis, 
as an object existing in its own right, a sort of machine for precipi- 
tating an "aesthetic experience." The artist's job was to be a con- 
summate craftsman, to construct his machine so that it would go off 
at just the right time in the spectator's face, and have just exactly 
the intended effects. However, like the manufacturers of most time 
bombs and infernal machines, he should exercise the greatest caution 
not to leave any fingerprints in the machinery. As nearly as pos- 
sible, the work of art should seem to be a sort of minor Act of God, 
a sublime, impersonal accident. The job of the critic, who preferred 
to be called an aesthetician, was to pick up the pieces and reconstruct 
the machine, so that other machines like it could be made, and so 
that the spectator would have a clinical knowledge of what was 
expected of him the next time one went off. If there were any tell- 
tale fingerprints around, they were ignored with a nervous little 
laugh as the business of vulgar detectives. This theory completely 



INTRODUCTION 

dominated European art for almost half a century. There is only 
one trouble with it, and that is that it isn't true. There are no such 
works of art. The painting of Picasso, or even Mondrian, the sculpture 
of Brancusi, the poetry of Eliot or Vale*ry, the music of Stravinsky, 
they are all intensely personal. In fact, they are amongst the most 
personal works of art in the history of culture. 

I believe that this rigorous rationalism, this supression of all acknow- 
ledgement of personality, feeling, intuition, the denial of communi- 
cation and of the existence of emotion, is part of the general sickness 
of the world, the Romantic Agony, the splitting of the modern 
personality, the attempt to divorce the brain from the rest of the 
nervous system. Reason and emotion, Nell Gwynne and Cromwell, 
puritanism and libertinism, stare in each other's eyes across the mind 
of modern, especially modern British and American, man. Where- 
ever a poet of major talent has tried to hide himself behind his reason 
as though it were some abstract, geometrical facade, he has only 
succeeded in further torturing and exposing his personality. Thus 
the abiding unity in the work of Valery is not his sweated Racine 
surface, but his specialized sensibility, his pained fastidiousness, and 
his special hell. Minor talents flourish under the encouragement of 
neo-classic fashions only because there are always handy-men about 
with nothing to hide and nothing to expose. 

So with British poetry of the first years of the world crisis. All these 
carefully cultivated echoes of Mother Goose, the Anti-Jacobin, Ed- 
ward Lear, Cole Porter, W. S. Gilbert, Anglo-Saxon riddles, The 
Face On The Bar Room Floor, were well enough understood in 
America as masks, like the masks in the paintings of Max Beckman, 
hiding something very unhappy if not nasty. That was precisely the 
point. By speaking slowly and distinctly in a quiet voice, with com- 
mon accents, one might get the patient to pay attention. The most 
effective warning of onrushing disaster is presumed to be the one 
spoken with the minimum of affect. Then too, it is apparent that 
the constant theme of Auden's poetry, at least, is: "I am just as sick, 
if not a little sicker, than thee." The trouble was that the idiom, 
this strange high-brow music-hall jargon, was too artificial, too dis- 
honest as speech, to wear well. It was a carefully learned bedside 

XI 



INTRODUCTION 

manner, a kind of dialect verse; and nothing is more distressing than 
poor dialect verse once it has gone out of date. W. H. Auden's New 
Year's Letter, the worst book he has written and one of the worst 
books of our time, reminds me of nothing so much as J. V. Weaver's 
In American, or James Whitcomb Riley. It is just the unsuccessful 
recording of the patois of a different social level. As a matter of 
fact, Auden has consistently preached personal involvement, personal 
responsibility but his language has slipped deeper and deeper into 
his own special literary cocktailese, it has grown harder and harder 
to believe him. He never seems, himself, to be really involved, to 
ever practice what he preaches. His Chinese, Iceland and Spanish 
books have a shallow, flippant impersonality about them which 
makes very unpleasant reading. Sometimes this all falls away, as in 
the September 1939 poem and "Human on my faithless arm;'* 
again and again in Auden there is a profoundly moving, despairing, 
nightbound, personal cry, and then back again comes the old snide 
bright jargon. I think the reaction against him is much less than the 
reactors imagine. Most of them are acting on the imperatives of his 
best poems, and few of them have escaped from his worst fault a 
peculiar rhetorical imprecision of language, a tendency to talk in 
terms of secondary reference instead of presentational immediacy, 
which is the besetting sin of most British verse with the exceptions 
of D.H. Lawrence, Ford Maddox Ford and Herbert Read. 

However much the practice of Auden himself may have been mis- 
understood, and however little it was lived up to, there is no doubt 
that there did exist in England a well established cult of imperson- 
ality, ultimately of artistic irresponsibility, unchallenged until the 
eve of the war. I think it was the events of the years 1935-36-37, 
more than any literary factors, which forced the issue of communi- 
cation, the person to person responsibility of artistic creation, back 
into prominence. 

Along with this aesthetics went, as everyone knows, a political pro- 
gram, or at least attitude Marxism or what passed for Marxism 
that is, a greater or less degree of sympathy and identification 
with the maneuvers of Russian foreign policy. One would think 
that revolutionary politics and aesthetic impersonalism would be 

XII 



INTRODUCTION 

contradictory, but Bolshevism is precisely an anti-personal, anti- 
humane revolution. The whole point of Marxism is that the mil- 
lenium occurs by accident, everything gets worse and worse until 
suddenly we are living in the best of all possible worlds. Furthermore* 
the artists in uniform of Bolshevik culture have no place for Blakes, 
Shelleys and Lawrences in their ranks. The job of the artist is to turn 
out, exactly as an American advertising copy writer, the most per- 
suasive devices possible. The content is supplied by the client, in this 
case, the Russian Bureaucracy. This led to a lot of agonized theorizing 
about the relation of form and content amongst the more honest 
fellow travellers. This is a childish question, which answers itself, 
and it was pitiful to see men of intelligence fretting themselves over 
a pseudo problem which had never before appeared in serious cri- 
ticism or aesthetics. The reason being, of course, that humane men 
had never before got themselves in such a predicament. Today, lit- 
erary Marxism has vanished in England, but it would be very un- 
wise to underestimate its importance. At one time it was all-powerful. 

The attempted Marxization of literature had effects not unlike the 
forced collectivization of agriculture in Russia. People noticed the 
baby going down the drain with the bath. Poetry was ceasing to be 
about anything more important than sociological formulae. Just at 
this time the Spanish War broke out. Then, after the first flush of 
enthusiasm had been cultivated carefully by the Popular Front, came 
the Moscow Trials, like a year-long bludgeoning of the naked heart, 
and, following the Trials, the manifest butchery of the Spanish Revo- 
lution for the exigencies of Russian foreign policy. 

The terror and betrayal of those years seem to have had a far more 
profound effect over there. In America the intellectual Left took it 
all pretty much in stride. It seemed, from the distance of Hollywood 
or 57th Street at least, no worse than Al Capone's antics, and it was 
for the worthiest of objects, the eventual brotherhood of man. The 
humane tradition did not die so easily in England. British opinion 
was outraged, and revolted violently. Then too, most British obser- 
vers in Spain were at least partially independent of the Stalinists and 
their whiskey-soaked, hairy-chested journalists who looked on the 
SpanishWar as a somewhat more thrilling bull fight. The Independent 

XIII 



INTRODUCTION 

Labor Party had a group there, naturally in sympathy with the most 
persecuted Spanish group, the P.O.U.M., there were many Labor 
Party people, and even the British Stalinists were controlled by their 
political commissars only with difficulty. This is all important. I 
believe that Spain, more than the Trials, the Pact, or even the War 
itself, marked the climacteric in British intellectual life, and I have 
never spoken or corresponded with anyone who did not agree with 
me. The moral earnestness and personal integrity which have been 
supposed to be typically British virtues reasserted themselves decidedly, 
even in the ranks of those who should have recovered from such 
petty bourgeois deviations. It is precisely these characteristics which 
were to be sought and cultivated deliberately in the ensuing period, 
and it is a moral quality, rather than a literary theory, which marks 
the New Romanticism. 

After the Spanish War it is almost as though literary England with- 
drew in a sort of uneasy, wounded isolation from European letters. 
There was a brief, half-hearted attempt to popularize Surrealism. Her- 
bert Read talked about it and wrote about it. There were Surrealist 
magazines and galleries. David Gascoyne, then a very young man, 
became its most enthusiastic spokesman and exponent. British Sur- 
realism never fell into the idle silliness of male hair dressers and par- 
fumistes, like its American counterpart, but it never took on. Since 
it had already died at its source the best French Surrealists had long 
since become Stalinists the British, closer to France than the Amer- 
icans, realized that Breton's little remant were as isolated, as fu- 
rious, and as meaningless, as their political bedfellows, the Trotskyites. 

Then too, if Marxism was not the answer, the vulgar Freudianism 
mixed with Old Bolshevik intransigeance of Surrealism was not the 
answer either. Both were patently mechanistic, anti-personal inter- 
pretations of the human situation. Further, as the crisis of Western 
culture deepened, it was obvious that Surrealism was empirically a 
failure. It simply could not do what it proposed to do. It was unable 
to live up to its very rash promises. A few painstakingly constructed 
exercises in "free association" written in the monotonous argot of 
the Freudian couch were no match for the actual nightmares come 

XIV 



INTRODUCTION 

true that went on in the newspapers. Certainly such pathetic toys 
were never going to "revolutionize the human sensibility as such," 
in the brave words of Andr Breton. In fact, they rapidly degene- 
rated into the sterile cliches of a dying popular fad, about as revo- 
lutionary as "knock, knock," Pee-Wee Golf, and "Confucius say," 
their somewhat more or less vulgar contemporaries. 

In the meantime, independent of programs and manifestos, changes 
were taking place in the practice of poetry. Even the more astute 
early reviewers of the work of Stephen Spender had noticed that there 
really wasn't much in common between him and the rest of the Auden 
circle. Those who compared him to Shelley were not far wrong. 
To avoid the words Classic and Romantic, if Auden and Day Lewis 
and MacNeice were primarily constructive artists, Spender was pri- 
marily an expressive one. Further, he was much more interested in 
himself and his own integration into the world than in any political 
solution. Even his politics was exceptional. He was never seduced 
by the attractively disguised blandishments of Stalinism. It is no 
accident that he wrote, not about the battles of the Popular Front, 
so carefully disciplined by the tommy-guns of the G.P.U., but 
about the lonely and hopeless struggle of the Viennese working 
class, those desperate heroes who died out of moral stubbornness, and 
whom the Red salons were calling "Social Fascists" at the very mo- 
ment they were falling under the cannonades of Fascism. 

During these years, besides his own poetry, Spender was working 
on the series of translations of Rainer Maria Rilke which he published 
with J.B.Leishman. These translations have had a tremendous effect 
on contemporary British verse, greater possibly than Spender's own 
poetry, and, I believe, mostly for the bad. Rilke is extremely popular 
with young writers in England, but even for those who read Ger- 
man, and few do, he seems to come to them as he has been transformed 
by Spender. Now Rilke may have lived in a cloud of patchouli, 
but it was a well defined cloud. If Stefan George may be said to 
have written German as though it was English, Rilke certainly wrote 
it with the clarity of French. There are few modern poets with a 
more active vocabulary. His nouns and adjectives are sharp and pre- 
cise and present immediate images, his verbs positively writhe with 

XV 



INTRODUCTION 

einfuhlung. There is none of this in the Spender-Leishman transla- 
tions. Everything is reduced to an amorphous, ruminative melancholy, 
thought about thought, words about words. All is imprecision, mood, 
like formless background music played by a good orchestra, Werner 
Jansen's sobbing violins accompanying the trivial pathos of a point- 
less movie. 

Young writers were turning away from the objectivism of Grigson 
and his school, because it was an objectivism without content, the 
photograph of a meal instead of a good dinner. Empson's verbal 
puzzles grew quickly boring, Auden's Byronic glitter had turned to 
brass, the Spender-Leishman Rilke gave the prestige of a great name 
to a vague, hypnotic sentimentality. The end of its influence is not 
yet. At the present time, the most conspicuous, though not the most 
important, difference between American and British verse is the rhe- 
torical imprecision and verbal lassitude of the latter. 

Spender's own verse may suffer from similar faults at times, but it 
contains no cheap-jack solutions, no political or religious confidence 
games, no smart aleck stylistic trickery. He never made any bold 
public statements about it, but he quietly moved away from those 
who suffered most from such faults. Reading him, one has the sense 
of a man trying desperately hard to be absolutely honest. I think it 
is for this reason that he is still a living influence on younger writers 
in England. 

In The Oxford Book of Modern Verse, Yeats had noticed another break 
with the dominant style of the time, and had prophesied that here 
was very likely a forerunner of a future literary revolution. I refer 
of course to George Barker. If the work of the previous generation 
was rhetorical, if the self was hidden behind panaceas for the world 
ill, in Barker, rhetoric is pushed to the critical point where it turns 
into its opposite. The world ill is taken into the self. Barker seems 
to swallow the sick public soul, neutralize it with his own spiritual 
intoxications, and then cast it forth, and his own occult inwardness 
along with it. This may not be the most lucid description of what 
is actually an impressive and exciting artistic process to observe, but 
it is obviously far removed from the ambulatory, jaded eye of Louis 

XVI 



INTRODUCTION 

MacNeice. Barker's verse is not just exhortative, like a political 
speech, it really is excited, its dynamism does not come from a rhe- 
torical formula, but from a disturbed and disturbing internal vortex. 
Barker has often been compared to Blake. He is rather like Blake, 
but like Blake in reverse, a mirror image. Blake objectified his in- 
ternal conflicts, not the absurd "conflicts" of the Freudian clinic but 
the actual struggle that always goes on in the awakened soul of man. 
He made mythological dramatis personae out of the elements of the 
self, and set them at war with each other. In many ways his method 
was not unlike that later developed by Carl Jung. Barker, on the 
other hand, has taken the figures of the collective unconscious which 
have assumed a terrible reality in our time, shorn them of their hypo- 
statization, and set them at war within his own self. If this were the 
end of the matter, the situation would be uncontrollable, and unen- 
durable, and would soon degenerate into madness or total irrespon- 
sibility. Barker's earliest work did, often, seem to stop here, but in 
later work the savior, the harrier of this interior hell, becomes more 
and more manifest. He is, as one might guess, the Divine Eros 
fleshed, the simple abandon and finding of the self in the act of love. 
In style too, Barker resembles a reversed Blake. Where Blake hunted 
for the particulars, the inescapable objectivity to garb his subjective 
vision, Barker pushes the subjective hallucination to the point where 
it takes body for others. This is what some Surrealists say, programma- 
tically, that they attempt. Barker does not try to reach a predeter- 
mined goal in the reader's consciousness by the use of psychiatric 
devices. He is, with great passion, a kind of person. 

If Auden dominated the recent past, Dylan Thomas dominates the 
present. There can be no question but that he is the most influential 
young poet writing in England today. The unanimity with which 
everyone except unreconstructed Stalinists and tame magazine ver- 
sifiers points to him as the greatest phenomenon in contemporary 
poetry is simply astonishing. Considering that something like this 
was once the case with Auden, it bodes ill for Thomas 'reputation some 
ten years hence. However, it was not always thus. When he first 
appeared, he was greeted with tolerant but embarrassed consterna- 
tion, as though he had just made a muss. Spender said his poems 
dripped like water out of a tap. Symons said he twisted words to the 

XVII 



INTRODUCTION 

shape of his reader's ears. He reminded Hugh Gordon Porteus of 
an unconducted tour of Bedlam, or a night out in a land of gibbering 
highbrows. And so on down the line, it was as though something 
had escaped that had been locked, up in Wild Wales since the Synod 
of Whitby, and was clanking its chains and yammering in the Rectory 
drawing room. Something terribly unbritish seemed to be happening. 
It was. 

Thomas is far more shameless than Barker. He doesn't wear his heart 
on his sleeve. He takes you by the neck and rubs your nose in it. 
He hits you across the face with a reeking, bloody heart, a heart full 
of worms and needles and black blood and thorns, a werewolf heart. 
This is the hairy wenid that has been peeping through the shutters 
since the Saxon drew his lines in Shropshire. In the old age of the 
English, it has burst in the door and settled down on top of the 
Sunday dinner. At first the noise was deafening, adders, she-bears, 
witches on the mountain, exploding pit-heads, menstruating babies, 
hounds with red ears, Welsh revivalists throwing dynamite and semen 
in all directions. Thomas smote the Philistine as hard a blow with 
one small book, Eighteen Poems, as Swinburne had with Poems and 
Ballads. 

The terrific racket has long since died down. It is possible now to 
inspect the early Thomas coolly and discover what he is saying and 
what he is talking about. Many elements went to form his idiom, 
all bound together by the reeling excitement of a poetry-intoxicated 
schoolboy. First, I would say, Hopkins' metric and his peculiar, 
neurasthenic irritability of perception; second, Hart Crane, whom 
Thomas greatly resembles; third, possibly, translations of Rimbaud 
and Maldoror, though he could have got most of this from Crane; 
fourth, Welsh poetry and mythology, with its gnarled metrics and 
its imagery of a barbaric and forested country, a land literally wild; 
fifth, the Old Testament, as it came to him through the savage Welsh 
Nonconformity; sixth, a mass of uncontrolled, boyish omnivorous 
reading: detective stories, translated Surrealism, "science fiction," 
horror tales, sex books, occultism, Shakespeare, Blake, Lawrence, 
Henry Miller, A.E.Waite, Arthur Machen, an orgy of literary sen- 

xvm 



INTRODUCTION 

sationalism. Yeats once said of somebody that he remained a bar- 
barian because he was born in the provinces and never had a chance 
to associate with a man of real culture until he was grown. Thomas 
wrote as though he had never met a human being who had ever 
bathed or used a toothbrush. On the other hand, there is nothing 
squalid about it. Thomas wrote like a savage chief on a scalp-taking 
expedition amongst the palefaces. He definitely belonged to the heroes 
of Toynbee's "external proletariat" not to the drudges and tramps 
of his "internal proletariat/* 

The early Thomas does not add up to just another barbaric yawp, 
however heroic. It all meant something. Possibly it was a raucous 
and primitive cry, but it was the most primitive and terrible cry in 
the world, the cry of parturition, the dual cry of mother and child. 
If Jung served to elucidate Barker somewhat, Rank can serve even 
better for Thomas. Most of his early poetry is about the agony and 
horror of being born and of childbirth. The substance of Rank's 
The Artist is that the artist is, psychologically, his own mother. Few 
have ever realized this as thoroughly and as violently as Thomas. 
For him the crucifixion and the virgin birth are one simultaneous 
process, archetypes of the act, or rather catastrophe, of the creative 
consciousness. Other men, Baudelaire for instance, have talked about 
their agonies as creators. Thomas discovered poetry on his hands 
like blood, and screamed aloud. 

I mentioned that Thomas resembled Hart Crane. This is as far as 
Crane was able to go the horror of creative birth. I once heard a 
preacher say that Christ's agony in the garden and his relations with 
his mother showed the terrible responsibility of sonship. Certainly 
this phrase can be applied to the early Thomas and to Crane. Crane's 
solution, his myth, the Bridge, did not work. It is possible to worship 
the mother, the father, the self, but a saving symbol cannot be made 
of the umbilicus alone, it must be connected to something. So Crane's 
poetry and his personality began to break up and deteriorate. This 
has not happened to Thomas. His recent work has developed in the 
only way that it could from such antecedents, towards a deeper 
mystical insight. He has moved away from the old, excited, tem- 

XIX 



INTRODUCTION 

pestuous possession, and toward the' humility and calm of ecstatic 
vision. So his influences have been, in his later poems, those entranced 
Welshmen, Vaughan and Herbert. 

I do not believe that Thomas is in any danger of falling into the 
appliqud metaphysical verse once fashionable in the Empson circle 
and in America. If an atheist don tries to write like Donne or Cra- 
shaw, the result is pretty sorry stuff. If one actually has an intensely 
religious, baroque personality, one doesn't have to try, one falls 
naturally into step with one's ancestors. I think it quite possible that 
the religious expression of the baroque sensibility is not the most 
profound of the varieties of religious experience, but it is certainly 
genuine, and it is certainly Thomas* vision, thoroughly and sincerely. 
The deepest regions of the soul may have been accessible only to 
the sculptors of the Bon Dieu of Amiens, and the Yakshini of the 
gate of Sanchi, or to the Zen landscapists, but it would be wicked 
to quarrel with the explorations of an El Greco or a Grunewald when 
they are undertaken once again in a naughty world. 

Thomas' impact was not just literary, it was in a special sense social, 
a cultural coup d'etat. Nothing less like a Marxist from a Good School 
being raffish at a country house could be imagined. After Thomas, 
literature was wide open to others than the sons of gentlemen, if 
they could find some way to keep alive. This is far more important 
than itjnight seem in America. And it is surprising how many of 
the significant younger poets in Britain today did not go to a Public 
School or to "either" University. In this regard too, Thomas resembled 
Hart Crane. He had the same sort of pariah integrity, and made the 
same violent assault upon official culture. The thin erudition of the 
previous generation, the result of judicious schooling and back num- 
bers of The Criterion, seemed idle stuff beside his wolfing of books. 
I think it important too that in Thomas the spiritual underworld of 
a suppressed civilization, the Celtic shadow cast by the Saxon torch, 
found voice and took flesh. Even today, however much he has quieted 
down, one still feels that a different culture speaks through him. 
This accounts for his barbaric aristocracy. The Highland "kings" 
encountered by Sam Johnson may have been barefoot, illiterate and 
lousy, but they were far more aristocratic than the Whig lords in 

XX 



INTRODUCTION 

their vast houses to the South, and more regal than the German 
bourgeois on his throne of compromise. 

About this time, the poetry of W.R.Rodgers began to appear in 
magazines. Although it is easy to write extensively about Barker 
and Thomas and still say something important, it is not so easy to 
do with Rodgers, and that is just the point. There is nothing spectac- 
ular about him. In fact his verse has a sort of dogged earnestness 
about it, although it is far from pedestrian. His great virtue is that 
he speaks for himself. He is relatively free of the fashionable influences 
of the day, and he has almost no visible connection with the previous 
generation. His work is as simple and profound as he can make it. 
His effects are achieved quietly, and they are always the direct out- 
come of integral experience. He never depends upon secondary re- 
ferences to chic reading matter and current postures. One of his 
peculiar virtues is a special sonority a sort of gong and woodwind 
depth and color of long vowel and labial, sibilant, and nasal music 
which is, as it were, a kind of counter Hopkins. Hopkins' baroque 
irritability expressed itself in staccato vowels and plosives and stops 
and a restive metrical distortion. Rodgers has the confidence of So- 
lesmes or the pre-Bach organists the marching, sure, unperturbed 
musical development of Byrd and Gibbons and Frescobaldi a Pro- 
testant, or at least pre-Tridentine answer to Hopkins. The quality I 
associate most clearly with his work is a rugged, protestant magna- 
nimity, courteous and polished enough superficially, but with, still 
underneath, a certain strongly masculine gaucherie. The comparison 
that springs to mind is Andrew Marvel. All one has to do is list these 
qualities to see how unusual and refreshing they would seem in the 
literary atmosphere of the time of his first appearance. It is difficult 
to measure Rodgers' influence, because, to the best of my knowledge, 
it has been effortless, he has never made any attempt to wield any. 
I think, however, that it has been considerable; depth, expression, 
simplicity, and integrity are certainly marked qualities in the work 
of many who have come after him. 

There was nothing programmatic about the new direction taken by 
Barker, Thomas and Rodgers. They were simply different from the 
generation that preceded them. Very soon, however, their innova- 

XXI 



INTRODUCTION 

tioas, especially Thomas*, were reduced to a program. The New 
Apocalypse was a well organized movement of the continental type, 
almost as well organized as the Auden circle or Breton's Surrealism. 
At one time it included George Fraser, Norman McCaig, Vernoii 
Watkins, J. F. Hendry, and Henry Treece. Today only Treece and 
Hendry still seem to think of themselves as Apocalyptics. 

In the beginning there was a slight air of reformed Marxist self-con- 
sciousness about Apocalypse. Lip service at least was still paid to the 
long since foundered Revolution. Sometimes there was almost a 
suspicion that the Apocalyptics looked forward to a day when there 
would be an Apocalyptic majority in the House of Commons with 
the Book of Revelations as a party platform. Certainly there was an 
effort to colonize the areas in the consciousness opened up by Thomas 
in the name of the main tradition of the revolt of the previous pe- 
riod, and at the same time to personalize the Revolution. 

As one looks back on Apocalypse, it is apparent that the name was 
fortunately chosen. Not only did it fit the times, but it meant more 
than its proponents realized. It conjured up memories of D. H. Law- 
rence and Albert Schweitzer. It implied what the latter called an 
"eschatological world view," a morality based on the assumption 
that we live in the imminence of judgment and destruction by fire, 
which happened to be literally true in a moderate degree. 

To quote from the Apocalyptic program: "i) That human, includ- 
ing poetic, development must be towards wholeness, and must recog- 
nize heart no less than head, the dream, no less than the waking world. 
2) That man has become the victim of mechanization, and must be 
freed if his personality is to survive; which freedom may come via 
Myth, Imagination (in Coleridge's sense) or a personal Religion as 
opposed to a Mass Creed." This sounds not unlike Jolas' valiant 
and vain effort to shift the base of Surrealism from Freud to Jung. 
Like Jolas, the Apocalypse failed as a movement, the participants 
scattered, aesthetically speaking, and some of them seem, today, a 
little ashamed of their connection. 

I believe Apocalypse failed because it was not a radical enough break 
with the past. It still bore marks of both literary Marxism and Sur- 

XXII 



INTRODUCTION 

realism. You cannot personalize a revolution which is, by definition , 
as impersonal as an earthquake. The science of seismology has no 
place for human values. The problem must be approached from the 
other end. One must revolutionize the concept and position of per- 
sonality, so degraded by our dying civilization. This is not just a 
rhetorical antithesis. In fact, it is what happened. Today Treece is 
one of the editors of the yearbook Transformation. As I see it, Trans- 
formation is attempting to do something similar to what Eliot did 
with The Criterion. It is trying to give England a new ideological 
center, this time a "Personalist" one, around which can be gathered 
a new generation, and from which all aspects of our culture could 
be approached consistently, judged and revalued. It is significant 
that Transformation has come more and more under the influence of 
the recently deceased Russian Orthodox philosopher and theologian 
Berdyaev. At the same time, Berdyaev himself had been reforming 
his philosophy into what can only be called a new and dynamic 
variety of religious anarchism. 

Treece himself has often been called an imitator of Thomas. It is true 
that Treece wrote an enthusiastic brochure about him when Thomas' 
total oeuvre was exactly Eighteen Poems, but there really is not a 
great deal of resemblance. Both are Welsh, but Thomas speaks, as 
I said, for the aristocratic underworld of a suppressed civilization. 
He is always the Druid, passing on his occult wisdom within the 
sound of the church bells. Treece uses a material much closer to folk 
art, to the changeless, gnomic tales of the universal peasant, Teuton, 
Celt or Finn. In fact, his best poems are very Germanic, marchen 
poetry, Grimm capsules. In spite of his Personalist professions, it 
is very difficult to come at the personal core in his poems, they slip 
away into anonymity, like handicrafts or Gothic woodcarvings. 

Originally greatly under the influence of D. H. Lawrence, D. S. 
Savage has developed along similar lines. He makes the rather acute 
point that a thoroughly integrated person would not go about calling 
himself a "personalist," but his book, The Personal Principle is a review 
of the masters of a generation, Lawrence, Yeats, Eliot, Crane, Auden, 
in terms of their ability to achieve personal integration or integral 
personality. The fact that he gives critical approval only to Harold 

XXUI 



INTRODUCTION 

Monro casts a cprtain suspicion on his method, but the book has 
some penetrating insights and has been very influential. His poetry 
certainly shows forth an integral personality lost in the violent, 
noisy, squalid darkness of a de-personalized and collapsing society. 
Savage, once the British editor of the forthrightly Lawrentian maga- 
zine Phoenix, is one of the possible channels through which D. H. Law- 
rence has re-emerged as a powerful, even dominant influence. How- 
ever, I think this was more a spontaneous and diffuse matter. After 
all, his books are still accessible. Of the major figures of the period 
immediately after the first war, he is, with Herbert Read, the only 
one who could be said to be potent today. It is not just the superfi- 
cial aspects of Lawrence, his abstract merits as a novelist or poet which 
are taken seriously, but his philosophy of life and his aesthetics. Fan- 
tasia of the Unconscious, Apocalypse, the posthumous papers and letters, 
certain of the more didactic poems, are being read by younger men, 
not just because they enjoy them, but because, largely, they agree 
with them. 

Another major influence which is difficult to measure is that of Henry 
Miller. All over the world Miller has acted as the liberator of a gen- 
eration. Not since Ibsen has an author had so catalytic an effect, nor 
has the reaction produced by his catalysis been so violent. Miller is 
not as great an artist as Lawrence or Ibsen or Neitzche or Strindberg, 
other, similar prophets of modern man, but his voice has been especi- 
ally loud and clear because he spoke when everyone else kept si- 
lent. No other person of his generation has had so great an influence 
on the young who were being asked to die for very dubious reasons 
in a second world war. I think it should be realized that those of 
combat age believed very little of what they were told by those who 
were not. Miller expressed their disbelief, and their emergent be- 
liefs, not just their distrust of the putative aims of their governments, 
but their rejection of the whole social lie of a diseased and tawdry 
civilization, and their hope to find a new foundation for life in a 
cleansed and redeemed love relationship. There were other things to be 
found in Miller, too his apocalyptic style, his disdain of fancy writ- 
ing and all the donnish recipes for ambiguity and chic, and, most 
important, his rejection of the State and all other complexes of power 
and irresponsibility as evil hoaxes. In the years when a monstrous 

XXIV 



INTRODUCTION 

social fraud was destroying the world, Miller pointed out that the 
Emperor did not have any clothes on. 

There is another side of Miller, his quietism, his ability to bend in 
the storm, his shunning of the violence of urban culture and literary 
conflict, his simple appetites and good nature, all of which add up 
to a kind of sensual Taoism or spiritualized hedonism. It is this aspect 
of Miller which is most pronounced in the work of his friend Law- 
rence Durrell. In the days when Miller's Tropics were creating a 
sensation, Durrell produced a somewhat similar novel, The Black 
Book. As a study of moral exhaustion it has seldom been equaled. 
There is a certain naivete* about Miller, he is very much like the Eight- 
eenth Century naive writer Restif de la Bretonne, but there is no- 
thing naive about The Black Book. It is as though Pascal had turned 
his scientific and passionate eye on the behavior of some trivial dia- 
bolist of the gutter. Having produced so accurate a diagnosis of the 
world ill, Durrell retired to the island of Corfu. There, eventually, 
the war caught up with him, but not until he had perfected a poetic 
expression of uniquely self sufficient tranquillity. Since then he seems 
to have undergone many of the vicissitudes of a moderately success- 
ful diplomatic career, but the interior idyll which he constructed for 
himself has remained undisturbed, certainly an indication of its 
authenticity. 

Miller was not quite alone. In England at least, one other older 
man spoke out, clearly and forcefully, Herbert Read. Sometimes I 
think Read is a little like Dryden. His personal development has 
had an unfortunate coincidence with historical movements and 
changes in the popular mind. He has been any number of things, or at 
least he has been influenced by a large number of popular intellectual 
vagaries Thomism, Humanism, Marxism, Freudianism, Surrea- 
lism, and so on. I believe this has not been because he was a band- 
wagon rider, for he has always climbed off the bandwagon before the 
calliope struck up a march, but because he has been very much alive, 
and awake to, and accessible to, the storms that have swept over 
Twentieth Century thought. Then too, there are a number of atti- 
tudes, principles and tastes which he has stuck to and never changed. 
He has always been a Platonist of a somewhat heretical sort. He has 

XXV 



INTRODUCTION 

always been interested in psychoanalysis, not just in Freud, but in 
all aspects of the subject, and seems to have read extensively all the 
masters. He has always had a strong sense of caste, of being a Plato- 
nic * 'guardian," somehow, by virtue of his sensibility and insight, 
like Confucius' gentleman, chun tzu, responsible for the public health. 
He has always been genuinely humane, always searching for an 
organic life in an organic society. He has always been interested 
in education, especially an education that would develop, as primi- 
tive society does, the intuitive, feeling, aesthetic, aspects of the per- 
sonality, as well as the reasoning and manipulative. Lastly, he has 
always had a special attachment to Wordsworth, in whom he has 
found, down the years, not Marxism, Humanism, Freudianism, Sur- 
realism, and so on, but what he, Herbert Read, meant by those things. 

When the second war came, Read stuck to the position he had as- 
sumed after the first one, he remained a pacifist. He had come out of 
the Spanish War years, the years of the Moscow Trials, convinced 
of the soundness and necessity of anarchism. He says somewhere 
that anarchism possiBly may sound impractical, but certainly less 
impractical than the modern capitalist nation-state would sound if 
described to someone in another civilization; and it is obvious that 
nothing else will work; any form of State is bound to fail from now 
on, and fail disastrously. 

Further, in various critical writings, Read had built up a whole phil- 
osophy of what he called Romanticism. It was an odd Romanticism, 
which always included the permanent elements of his mind I men- 
tioned above. Its poetics was based on Plato, Milton's phrase, "simple, 
sensuous and passionate," the Preface to Lyrical Ballads, and Rilke's 
Letter to a Young Poet. It seems to me that this is a Romanticism which 
would fitly describe most Greek and Roman poetry; and since, in 
addition, he has distinguished himself, the Romantic, from T. S. 
Eliot, the Classicist, I must confess that I for one, am all at sea. But 
no matter. 

In Read it is possible to see all the strains of the time converge. His 
recent writing on art approximates the position of the Catholic anar- 
chist Eric Gill. He speaks of the necessity for an organic art, deeply 

XXVI 



INTRODUCTION 

imbedded in life and growing from it, and not hung on the walls 
of museums. It happens that as Lawrence lay dying in Vence he was 
writing a review of Gill's first book.* Lawrence and Read share with 
Gill a whole world view, not just an aesthetic the rejection of me- 
chanistic civilization, sterile scientism, and topheavy rationalism, the 
quest for a true integrality of the person, a belief in the importance 
of sacramental marriage. This is also Berdyaev's philosophy, and 
with him too, and with all the others, Read shares a belief in the im- 
portance of ritual, reverence for life, the reverent performance of 
the acts of life, sacramentalism. Now "reverence for life" is a key 
term in the philosophy of Albert Schweitzer, and Schweitzer is the 
father of the "apocalyptic world view." Similarly, Read has spoken 
of the essential characteristic of a humane society, a reverence for 
other persons that one should treat his fellow not as a he, she, or it, 
but as a thou, in the words of Martin Buber. So all the threads draw 
together. It is well that they should be drawn together in Read. He 
is incomparably the most civilized as he is the eldest of the poets of 
the Romantic movement, and he is probably the only one who has 
read all the testaments of what, by now it should be obvious, is not 
just a new school of poetry, but a new world outlook from Chuang 
Tzu to Henry Miller and from Carl Jung to Martin Buber. Also, 
and not least important, he is a highly polished artist, and the effect 
of his wartime collection of verse, A World Within A War, owed 
much to the sheer perfection of its writing. It said the same things 
the younger men were saying, but it said them with a maturity, depth 
and finesse of which most of them were, at least as yet, incapable. 

Read was not alone in advocating anarchism. During the Spanish 
War the anarchist paper Spain and the Revolution, formerly, and now 
agam, Freedom, was one of the most reliable sources of information 
for British radicals. Most of the other radical papers were at least 
tendentious, and in the case of the Stalinists simply mendacious. 
Then too, the impression made by the Catalan anarchists on the Brit- 
ish volunteers and observers was, in a personal sense, revolutionary. 
Their bravura, and the genuine freedom of their lives, were poles 
removed from the dry, doctrinaire, circumspect, sociological behav- 
ior of the traditional British Left. British radicalism, no matter how 
red, was bound up in the strait-jacket of Fabianism and Methodism, 

XXVII 



INTRODUCTION 

and when it, or rather its younger representatives under arms, en- 
countered hot nights, bad cognac, dark eyes, sweat and dynamite, the 
strait-jacket exploded. In many ways, British anarchism is a revolt 
in favor of all those beautiful things in life which aren't British. 
Spain introduced another note, via Garcia lorca in literature, "Black 
Spain," with its Muslim fascination with death and sweating lust and 
danger and pain, unbritish subjects hitherto ignored by the best taste. 
The young anarchist poet George Woodcock started a magazine 
Now, at first a most unpretentious poetry sheet, and later a quite 
influential paper. Originally purely literary, it gradually came to 
encompass most of the aspects of the new tendency and its catholicity 
of editorial policy was probably a shock to those who expect of a 
radical publication the heresy hunting and dogmatism of the Marx- 
ist journals. Similarly, Woodcock's own poetry has been anything 
but tendentious. 

With the exception of Read, Alex Comfort is the nearest thing to 
a systematic Romantic. He has a well thought out and consistent phil- 
osophy of life with which he seems to be able to encounter most con- 
tingencies, and by which his literary practice is illuminated and rein- 
forced. Central to it is the concept of the personality at war with 
death physical death, or the mechanization of the State, and all the 
other institutions of irresponsibility and spiritual sloth.With Comfort, 
physician and experimental physiologist, the arts of literature and 
medicine may reinforce each other. Certainly he has a maturity and 
grasp, a sense of mastery of his material, which is rare in so young 
a man. He has a universality about him in many ways reminiscent 
of Albert Schweitzer. I would be inclined to say that he, Woodcock, 
and Savage are the most remarkable of the young men who came 
first to prominence during the War, and it is significant that they are 
all anarchists, "personalists," and pacifists. In his critical book, What 
I Mean by Apocalypse Treece also calls himself an anarchist. 

I say young men, because the war years also produced a number 
of remarkable women poets. It seems somewhat false to discuss a 
writer on the basis of her sex, as a woman poet, or worse, poetess. 
Still, poets like Anne Ridler, Kathleen Raine, Lynette Roberts, Bren- 
da Chamberlain, Eithne Wilkins, Denise Levertov, Alison Boodson^ 

XXVIII 



INTRODUCTION 

all share an intense femininity, if nothing else. The previous period 
was not very strong on women poets, I can think of none offhand. 
It is not just that the men were off to war and the field was left open 
which brought out so many women, but rather, I think, the reorienta- 
tion towards personal expression, and away from construction and 
political rhetoric. So these women have written about the things 
that matter, not about current delusions lovers and husbands leaving 
for war, babies, death, birth, love, all subjects frowned on in earlier 
years. Certainly if Audcn and his friends ever had any babies, they 
never wrote about them. 

Nicholas Moore, although he has figured prominently in the growth 
of the Romantic movement, both as an editor and as the perso- 
nal friend of many of its leading figures, stands somewhat outside 
the general picture. It seems to me that he owes more to American 
poetry, especially to Wallace Stevens and to the Fugitives group. He 
is past master of a relaxed, civilized, conversational tone. It is really 
amazing how natural his lines sound. It is so casual and offhand un- 
til one pays close attention to what he is talking about, and then it 
turns out that he is one of the most intense and visionary of the Ro- 
mantics, and a consummate craftsman of effects of great subtlety. 
It is as though Baudelaire were to be rewritten, over the biscuits and 
sherry, by Walter Bagehot. I might point out that this idiosyncratic 
mode of expression has no similarity to the "public speech" of the 
previous period. 

Fred Murnau, a Czech emigre living in England, has been very in- 
fluential, as an editor, a poet, and personally, in the development of 
the new Romanticism. His work, written in German and translated 
by Ernest Sigler, has reinforced the tendencies which first appeared 
in the Spender-Leishman Rilke. His poetry has a dreamy, nostalgic 
sorrow about it, reminiscent of autumn evenings in the Wienerwald 
before the other war, lights on the river at Budapest, Smetana's 
Moldau, Brahms at his most ruminative. It isn't about any of these 
things, but it is certainly saturated in the special sentiment of bygone 
Middle Europe. In poets like Denise Levertov this tendency reaches 
its height in slow, pulsating rhythms, romantic melancholy and un- 

XXIX 



INTRODUCTION 

defined nostalgia. Once these qualities would have been considered 
blemishes, today they are outstanding, virtues. For the first time, 
schwarmerei enters English verse. 

Has the Romantic Movement reached its apogee, produced an idiom, 
an expression which will be as definitive as the best work of Auden 
was for his period? The idiom, yes. There can be no question but that 
a new and different medium has been developed, but it is doubtful 
if the major works in that idiom have been written. I do not believe 
that Thomas should be grouped with the Romantics, anymore than 
Donne should be grouped with Shelley. Spender, Barker and Rod- 
gers are really precursors of the movement rather than members. 
The younger people are still developing, some of them so fast it has 
been hard to keep up with them. 

The religious personalism and political anarchism which provide the 
dominant ideology of the movement is still young as a Weltanschau- 
ung. It is not something taken over from their bureaucratic betters 
by poetic fellow travellers, but has been developed, in situ and from 
the heart by Read, Comfort, Woodcock, Savage, Treece, and the 
rest, as they went along. So it can still stand an enormous amount 
of critical shaping. Its relations with the orthodox "anarchist move- 
ment," a rather doctrinaire body at the best, as well as its relations 
with Catholic and Protestant Christianity, are still to be defined. At 
least it can be said that contemporary English thought has avoided 
the diffuse, eclectic, heterodox religiosity represented by Huxley, 
Heard, Isherwood and other Anglo-Hollywood mystics, and, on the 
other hand, has shown no signs of being captivated by the masochistic 
kitsch which passes for profundity amongst the continental Existen- 
tialists and certain circles in New York. That is an undeniable blessing. 

There is one place where many of the leading ideas of the New Ro- 
manticism are not new, in fact they are part of the accepted consen- 
sus of informed opinion, and that is the Catholic Church. Contem- 
porary Catholic apologetic has made much of the importance of 
the person, the value of ritual and sacramentalism as an expression 
of respect for life, the drive of the modern State towards mechanical 
evil, the significance of marriage as a channel of spiritual realization, 

XXX 



INTRODUCTION 

the irresponsibility of modern warfare. So it is that there has been 
a certain convergence. The wave of revolt against modern materialism 
has brought some poets into the Church, other Catholic poets have 
been fairly closely identified with Romanticism from its inception, 
and Catholic anarchists and personalists like Gill and Berdyaev have 
had a great influence in England. 

Kathleen - Raine, Anne Ridler, Norman Nicholson, all Catholics, 
are amongst the best poets writing in England today. Kathleen Raine's 
work is remarkable for her concentration on absolute purity of sen- 
sibility. She reminds me of the modern French Catholic verse which 
has learned from Valdry. Originally the youngest member of the 
Cambridge group, her work has always seemed far more intense 
and ^ethereal than theirs. In recent years personal tragedy and con- 
version to the Church have given it new poignancy and meaning. 
She is not the least member of a tradition which includes Christina 
Rossetti, Alice Meynell, and Michael Field. Anne Ridler writes about 
love, marriage, children, the loneliness of parting, all the simple, 
sacramental facts of a woman's life, a sort of Tertiary Franciscan poe- 
try. Some of her later work, possibly influenced by Eliot's Four 
Quartets, has moved on to larger mystical and moral themes. Nichol- 
son is a strange exception to the general run of English poetry today. 
He lives in one of the most beautiful of English counties, Cumber- 
land, withdrawn from the distractions, the tragedies and vast issues 
and petty spites of life in the capital, and his verse is withdrawn too. 
It has the same peace, care, and mystical stillness that Wordsworth 
sought, and sometimes found, in the same region. There are others 
who seem to be on the border of Catholicism. Nigel Heseltine and 
Rayner Heppenstall (two of the most easily confused names in con- 
temporary letters!) both write an ambiguous, Gnostic sort of poetry, 
which, however heterodox, certainly makes very free use of Catholic 
symbolism. Derek Savage, again, has much in common with con- 
temporary Catholic radicalism, and David Gascoyne's Gravel Pit 
Field, whatever its sectarian religious background, if any, is one of 
the finest mystical poems I know. 

Thomas, Treece, Watkins, Lynette Roberts, Keidrych Rhys, Brenda 
Chamberlain, Heseltine, Glyn Jones, Woodcock, are all Welsh. There 

XXXI 



INTRODUCTION 

is a more or less deliberate Welsh School which centers around Rhys* 
magazine Wales. A heavy odor of the modernism of the Twenties 
still hangs over the poetry in Wales. Most of this stuff is dreadful and 
I have not included it. Keidrych Rhys and Lynette Roberts, both fine 
poets, are, however, somewhat blemished by it. Brenda Chamberlain 
is, I feel, one of the very few (another is Eithne Wilkins) younger 
poets who has been able to recapture and transmit or transmute some 
of the technical, syntactical, psychological devices and felicities of 
those days into the Romantic idiom. She is one of the poets in Britain 
whose work I think may, by a thesis-antithesis-synthesis develop- 
ment in relation to the previous generation, presage the growth of 
a new, post-romantic style. Although there is considerable talk of a 
Welsh renascence, most of the poetry of Welsh writers has entered 
immediately into the main stream of British verse. I think it is signi- 
ficant however, that London has not produced anything resembling 
its proportion of writers. This seems to be true always of decaying 
capitals; generation by generation, the major Roman poets come from 
farther and farther away from Rome. 

Contemporary Scots writing, on the other hand, has nothing to 
do with England. The Scots Renascence is dominated by Hugh 
Macdiarmid. Someone once said of him that he had done for Scots 
verse what Parnell did for Irish politics, a doubtful, though fitting 
compliment. It is certainly true that the Renascence is so under his 
influence that it suffers from his faults and is limited by his crotchets. 
He has plenty of both and to spare. In fact, he is regarded, South of 
the Border, as pretty much of a professional oddy. This is probably 
true, but it is unjust. He is unquestionably one of the most important 
writers in the British Isles, and a genuine world literary figure, but 
he is also a deliberate eccentric, a man of very mixed and incongruous 
notions, all held with the maximum bigotry. He seems to be a Bol- 
shevik, a Scotch Republican, and sometimes talks as though he were 
a Stuart Legitimist as well. Recently, noticing the commotion to 
the South, he has added that he is an anarchist, Stalinism being only 
a technique for achieving anarchism! His reading is immense, not 
just omnivorous, but gluttonous, and it is served up in large chunks 
of ill-digested quotation at the most opportune and inopportune times 
in everything he writes, prose or verse. In many ways he resembles 

XXXII 



INTRODUCTION 

Ezra Pound, and at one time they had considerable admiration for 
each other. His dislike of Auden and his circle is extreme, and dates 
back to the very beginning. Possibly this is due to the fact that he 
is, like Laura Riding, one of Auden's most carefully concealed "an- 
cestors." All the Auden program is there, "public speech" (?), Marx- 
ism, rationalism (he has actually said that Stalinism should be called 
"mentalism" because it is the doctrine that man can save himself 
by the exercise of his reason; however, he has said other things, 
completely contradictory) sentimentalism, the attack on the Public 
School and Suburbia and the Empire Mind, and the constant por- 
trayal of the signs of death in bourgeois society. In my opinion it 
is all done much better, as it was done much earlier, by Macdiarmid. 
A common criticism of Macdiarmid is that he does not write a 
true, dialectical Scotch, but a dictionary language made up by 
consulting a Scots dictionary and substituting Doric wherever pos- 
sible for English. This produces an inorganic and unnatural lingo never 
spoken by man, something like babu English, and motivated really 
by a factitious pseudo-nationalism. This is a difficult criticism to assess. 
It depends largely on whether Macdiarmid gets away with it 
sometimes he does not but very often he does, brilliantly. Possibly 
the Scots words in poems like The Watergaw, The Eewis-stane, 
O who's been here afore me, lass, come from different dialects but 
the effect is integral. Possibly the synthetic character of the vocabulary 
is what gives some of the earlier longer poems the sound of jargon. 
The later long elegies seem more compact and natural, as far as the 
use of Scots goes. At the present time Macdiarmid is writing long 
poems, full of quotations from many languages, and jam-packed 
with every notion, important or not, contradictory or not, that 
crosses his mind. These things are fun to read, but I can think of no 
principle on which one could select any passage for anthologizing. His 
early lyrics are amongst the finest in the Scots language, some of them 
the equal of Burns. By contemporary taste they have one grave fault. 
Although they have an unforgettable music and an atmosphere as 
weird as it is poignant, they are strangely impersonal. Even more than 
Pound, behind lyric or elegy it is very hard to find a living man. 

This could hardly be said of the Gaelic poet Sorley Maclean. His 
poems have been compared to the songs of the Tain bo Cualgne* 

XXXIII 



INTRODUCTION 

the Cuchulain epic, and to Simonide;, but there is no doubt that they 
are about himself. If other people can write poetry like this in Gaelic, 
there is no question but what it will again be a living language. Al- 
though he has been translated by others into Scots verse, notably by 
Douglas Young, I prefer his own prose-poem translations which are 
at least as remarkable as the somewhat similar work of Lady Gregory. 

William Soutar's verse is unique. Paralyzed for many years, he lay 
in bed, looked out through an immense window into his garden, 
and wrote innumerable poems - thousands - both in English and 
Scots. Most of them are pure and honest, but really occasional verse. 
A few are startling things to come on in modern literature. They 
have a directness and absolute simplicity, and at the same time a 
sweetness and perfection that has very seldom been equalled. These 
are poems that at their best rise to near levels occupied only by 
Cowper. Soutar, incidently, was, though bedridden, a very active 
pacifist and opponent of the State. 

I have included a section from J. B. Macleod's Ecliptic, a poem pub- 
lished a good while ago, but in my opinion undeservedly forgotten. 
Pushed aside by the highly organized claque of the Thirties, Macleod 
seems to have given up poetry, which is a great pity. Ruthven Todd 
and George Fraser, though both Scottish, seem in recent years to 
have been pretty much absorbed into English literature. It happens 
that both write verse characterized by directness and honesty and 
unabashed sentiment not unlike the prose of F. Scott Fitzgerald. I 
should not be surprised if this special medium which they share 
should not become more common in the near future. 

I have not printed anyone simply because he was a "soldier poet" 
or was killed in the war, anymore than I have included anyone be- 
cause he was a conscientious objector, a cripple or a woman. I do 
not believe that such things have much to do with poetry. On the 
other hand, I agree with Yeats that, by and large, war poetry is 
pretty dreadful stuff. It serves its purpose in its day, but whatever 
the pity of its circumstance, it is soon forgotten. Owen, Yeats to the 
contrary, is remembered, but he would have been, whatever he wrote 
about. The second war had its Owens, grave losses to British letters, 

XXXIV 



INTRODUCTION 

but most of them too young to estimate exactly what they would 
have grown into. One man's death, however, was an unquestionable 
literary catastrophe. Keith Douglas from his very first poems as an 
Oxford undergraduate, had a control of his medium which only is 
given to those who are going to become very great writers. I con- 
sider his poems beyond question the best written under combat in 
the second war. Not only that, but far more than Todd or Fraser, 
I think he pointed a new direction towards simplicity and candor, 
which is very possibly going to be the dominant mode of the next 
phase of British poetry. 

There are several poets whom I have not been able to fit into this 
survey. Some lie outside the general pattern, like Sean Jennett, Eithne 
Wilkins, Vernon Watkins, Terence Tiller, Laurie Lee. Others, like 
Allott, Spencer, Madge, belong in style if not in age to the preced- 
ing period. I have, as I said, tried to include everyone, of whatever 
style, whom I consider a good poet, who was born in 1908 or later. 
Besides the Scots, I have made only two exceptions that I know of; 
one is Vernon Watkins, who only began to appear with the Apo- 
calypse, who is allied to, if not part of, the Romantic movement; 
and the other, Charles Wrey Gardiner, whose serious poetic devel- 
opment dates only from his meeting with Comfort, Moore, Murnau 
and the rest. His journal of one year of Romanticism, family, money 
and erotic difficulties, buzz bombs and passionate conversation in 
intellectual pubs, The Dark Thorn, is the best picture of the world 
of contemporary British poetry which I know. 

In closing I might mention the more important periodicals. Magazines 
of the previous period, like Scrutiny, New Verse, New Signatures, 
Twentieth Century Verse, have all perished, and with them, many of 
those of the Romantic movement, such as Seven and Kingdom Come. 
Strictly within the field of poetry the magazine that has moved the 
most mountains has been Tambimuttu's (the name is Singhalese) Poetry 
London. In the first issue, on the very eve of war, Tambi published 
a "Letter" which sounded less like a literary manifesto than a series 
of excerpts from the Tao Te Ching and Chuang Tzu. Speaking as 
an Oriental, with perfect confidence in his non-European background, 
he was able to marshall a "history" of Western civilization in terms 

XXXV 



INTRODUCTION 

of causes, diagnosis, pathology remedies, behavior and prognosis, with 
a cogency and insight which very few English poets could have 
mustered. The effect seems to have been galvanic. Poets rallied to 
him immediately. For all the years of the war he published the best 
verse and the newest verse in England. Recently PL has come out 
only sporadically, at long intervals. Without Tambimuttu the picture 
might have been different, more like America where the generation 
that came up during the war is still struggling for a hearing. 

Somewhat later Wrey Gardiner began to open the pages of Poetty 
Quarterly, originally a pretty dull, conventional, Poetry Club sort 
of magazine, to the new movement. Soon he was in the midst 
of the stream. Poetry Quarterly has been less erratically published 
than Poetry London; once convinced, Gardiner has persevered with 
greater concentration and singleness of purpose than Tambimuttu. 
His publishing house, Grey Walls Press, also issues a yearbook, New 
Road, edited by Fred Murnau or Alex Comfort, or both together, 
which has provided a more permanent medium of publication for 
the Romantic movement, and which also prints plays, fiction and 
criticism. 

Both Grey Walls and Poetry London also publish books of verse. 
Routledge, a large, old and well-established firm, of which Herbert 
Read is an editor, has published small booklets of many of the Ro- 
mantic poets, and it has published them early, while they were still 
young, and at very modest prices. We do things diifcrently in 
America, where Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams are 
still known to reviewers as "young poets of the experimental 
generation." 

John Lehmann's yearbook, New Writing, well known in America, 
has not shown much sympathy with Romanticism. Lehmann has 
tended to concentrate on his own circle of poets, most of whom I 
find very uninteresting, or to publish well recognized names. Te- 
rence Tiller and Laurie Lee, both very fine, somewhat "classical** 
poets, the latter much influenced by Garcia Lorca, are favorites of 
Lehmann's and he must be commended for first having printed Gas- 
coyne's Gravel Pit Field. 

XXXVI 



INTRODUCTION 

Life and Letters To-day, edited by Robert Herring, has been very 
eclectic, interested primarily in what the editor considers good writ- 
ing rather than in giving expression to any particular school. Herring, 
himself Scots, has given more space than most English publications 
to the Scots Renascence and the work of Welsh writers. 

Horizon plays a role in contemporary literary England not unlike 
that once assumed by The Dial in America and The Criterion in Bri- 
tain. I do not think Cyril Connolly has been very interested in Ro- 
manticism as a movement. He again, has printed primarily what 
seemed to him to be good writing. With true English hyper- or 
hemi-insularity, he seems to be unaware of the really rather deafening 
commotion going on in Scotland. 

I have mentioned Wales, Now and Transformation. There is also a 
small magazine published whenever he has enough material, by Alex 
Comfort, called Poetry Folios. Its most distinctive quality is its judi- 
cious editing; a file of Poetry Folios would make an excellent anthol- 
ogy of contemporary verse, English, American and European. 

William Maclcllan is sort of the official publisher to the Scots Re- 
nascence. He has printed all the leading figures in handsome, cheap 
editions, and his Poetry Scotland and Scottish Life and Letters are amongst 
the most stimulating periodicals I know. 

I have tried to make this collection as comprehensive as possible. 
In some cases I have had to cut down on the amount of space given 
to a poet because of high anthology fees, in others, I have been unable 
to reach, or at least to obtain an answer from the poets I should have 
like to have included. I am deeply grateful for all the help I have 
received from many people. To Wrey Gardiner, Brenda Chamber- 
lain, Derek Savage, Alex Comfort, George Woodcock, Nicholas 
Moore, Denise Levertov, whose advice and correspondence have 
been valuable to me beyond thanks or estimate. To Poetry London, 
Grey Walls Press, George Routledge Ltd., Faber and Faber, John 
Lehmann, Lindsay Drummond, Andrew Dakers, and other pub- 
lishers, who have sent me books and forwarded letters. To the staff 
of The California State Library and its Sutro Branch in San Fran- 

XXXVII 



INTRODUCTION 

cisco, who have been very helpful. And, finally, as always in these 
cases, to my wife, who has done mountains of typing, and with 
whom I have discussed the selections at length. It is to her that this 
book is dedicated, as well as to James Laughlin, to whom it has been 
a great trial, but who has ultimately always yielded and given me 
my way, and to whom I, as well as many another, owe more than 
a book dedication, both as publisher and as friend. 

KENNETH RBXROTH 



XXXVIII 



Louis Adeane 

POEM ON HAMPSTEAD HEATH 

The angry future like a winter builds 
Storms in the trees and branches in the fields. 
The voices threaten in the thickening stream 
And thunders frowning in the summer's dream 
Shake down the doves like snow, 
Turn the quick hourglass low. 

The past as heavy as the patterned hand 
Moulding the landscape, opens and is stained; 
The memory mocks us in its painted cage 
And simian gestures on a rural stage 
Bidding time's jest begin, 
Summon our yokel grin. 

Oh leave the dancers and their antic hour, 

Prophets with crystals, mirrors of the fair ; 

The growing present like a tree prepares 

These newly branching roots, this storm of leaves, repairs 

Gently, oh falling mould, 

The loss of what is born, the lapse of what is old. 

FOUR POEMS FOR APRIL 
I 

Now by this lake, this fallen thunderstorm, 
Her gold-struck hair is beaten with the grass; 
Her limbs lie slackly in the darkening soil, 
Grief sifts its pallor on her doom-stained face. 



LOUIS ADEANE 

My terrible kindness coiled within her will 
Still saps her anger with a soothing tongue; 
The startling cloud of love, unbearable, 
Descends dispersed to silt the struggling wing. 

My merciless anima, impending death, 
I see your world behind today's caress, 
The strangled kitten in the innocent hands, 
The dreaming horror and maternal kiss, 

And through your candled future I can tell 
Our fear-filled present opening like a fan, 
The dazzling eyelid tempted into fire, 
The transient shadow and the twist of pain. 

Yet poise again your love, my beautiful, 
Raise quick the innocent child, the smiling flesh, 
Lift your white anger and your whip-red mouth 
And send your mercy like a lightning flash. 



Rise from the waves, my river ing one 
Curving your slenderness cold and gold 
Glimmering on the rocks, or by the sands 
Finger the water's wavering line. 

There where you ride on clarity 
Playing all day with coins of foam 
I should beware your buoyancy 

Seeing at last that you have come 
Out of a whirlpool's fluency 
Siren curling a shell of home 



LOUIS ADEANE 

Rose as your love's delivering womb, 
Knowing the tenderness that I hold 
Murmuring always mocks, and in my hands 
Lingers the warning bell of doom. 

3 

Through your grey eyes evasive heaven 

Vistas at last the certain happiness 

And across skies the sunrise of my vision 

Spaces your hair in strands of gold and rose; 

Your fountain body melts, the hills of distance 

Shimmer to clouds through your transparent pose. 

Landscape my lovely dream of hawthorne 
Pausing with blossom by the trembling lake 
Where the swan glides and poising children 
Watch today's smiling image shake 
Like unaccountable tears, stay still and valley 
Always the curving vase that time could break. 

Stay still, my butterfly screen transposing 
Thinly the mountains of my view 
With delicate wings the webs of crystal, 
Veins of your rising love, the crimson dew; 
Stay still, my quivering dream, remember 
Landscape and future both arc you. 

4 

Gone, my white tangible angel falling 
Over the edge of the world into the south, 
Daring like emigrant bird the terrible journey, 
The swelling exultant exhausted breasts, the 
Smiling and bleeding mouth. 



LOUIS ADEANE 

Blown with the dust and desires in your revelling 
Tangled unsleeping untouchable hair, 
Travelling under the serpent and over the reaching 
Forests of parasites flowering, leaping, 
Avid with arching fire, 

Torn, my immaculate angel the tactile 
White and gold covering down to the blood 
Beating like suns through your beauty, the quivering 
Flushing flesh parting, the blood-circles spinning 
Staining your curve to red. 

Thrown between moving rocks, the impacting 
Merciless icebergs sliding to kill, 
The blizzard blurring to snow and the soft deluding 
South enfolding your wings, accepting your 
Spent and pitiful will, 

Stone, my intractable strangled angel, 
The painted girl in the ice, 
Flashing your jewels of tears and swaying 
Down in the glacier, silent, gliding, 
Frozen for bravery, beautiful. 



THE NIGHT LOVES US 

This is our love, these wheels and chains, 
Walls, windows, vistas, fettered edge of foam. 
Our blood blew red and melted; these remains 
Are love cooled down to solid shapes of home. 



LOUIS ADEANE 

Yet outside place, beyond our brittle light 
Spread fields incredible, the planes of love; 
Invisibly they flood towards our sight, 
Our little city stands within a wave. 

And growing greenly in subversive park 
Their secret fountains flourishing impel 
The child to feel love falling from the dark, 
The wishing girl to dream beside a well. 

So leaping flowers in the burning town 
May light the marble gardens of our thought 
And running visions melt our coldness down 
To fire the insurgent freedom of the heart. 



Kenneth Allott 



DEPARTURE PLATFORM 

It will always be like this 
At the unmeeting place: 
The scrambling crowds and air 
When the gilt clock-hands move 
Across the wet moon-face 
(Seen cheek touching lip 
Through your distracting hair) 
To enter time again 
Where disappointments live 
In shabby comradeship. 



KENNETH ALLOTT 

All this is nothing new. 

Still on the stroke of four 
A wilderness of rail 
Into which we have come 
Feeling like all the lost 
Ten tribes of Israel, 
Maybe to see and hear 
The hobbled tree of steam 
Lofting between the wheels 
Its paradisal hiss 
Under a dripping roof; 

The rain still falling now 

To share a jealous dream 
Of pert and slithering heels 
In the rain's puddled glass 
Who have the time I leave, 
And all the afternoon 
A bitter nail, a clove, 
A high blind window pane, 
When the black pistons drive 
Where but away from love. 

Now there is nothing new. 



CHESHIRE CAT 

Tonight the rain sheets down. After an hour 
It does not seem there can be any more; 
And I am moved, 



KENNETH ALLOTT 

Stripped of whatever's English for savoir-faire, 

To tell you, where you are, 

How you are loved, 

And how your harm I mean if once believed. 

Streakingly listening in a rain-darkened door 

To roof and railing drip 

Beaded like idiot's trembling underlip, 

And nervous as a hare; 

By a sky deepening like a bruise 

I suck the hollow tooth 

Of absence, absence until the wet slates whirl: 

A syllable would spoil 

My choked rage at the between-us leagues of air. 

Now the black houses lean 

Peopling with your face 

My loneliness; 

And I mislay the minimum of phlegm 

Which furnishes to time 

Parodies of what I am 

(Oh, scissors and wing-collars of routine) 

For all-elastic Gobis of migraine 

On a damned continent without a name. 



George Barker 



This is that month, Elizabeth, 

When at the equinox 
Biological life divests its death 



GEORGE BARKER 

Equating the paradox 
That crosses its dovetails underneath 
All internecine sex. 

Where silent once, where silent once, 

Bedded in negatives we 
Held hands across the Winter whence 

This April lets us free, 
Now up in the solstice dance 

We join with biology. 

Generation towards generation stirs 

Of human and animal; 
Prime causes, giving birth to stars, 

Gives equally to all 
The multiplication of universe 

In animal and amoeba. 

This is that day, Elizabeth, 

The lamb and child have fed 
From your abundant hand when both 

Begged you for love and food. 
The cuckoo, recalling in aftermath, 

When he was your performer, 
Remember shall in Winter with 

Double delight this Summer. 

Scattering wreaths the spectres rise 

Taking their first deep breath; 
The seas go gadding with bright eyes, 
Dead desires get up and rejoice 
At circumventing death, 



GEORGE BARKER 

And to all these I join my voice 
In Love, Elizabeth. 

II 

So in a one man Europe I sit here 
Thinking a peace and a perfect map 
Also for the epileptic hemisphere. 
What now obsesses us all is shape 
Whose horrible mutations, like a birth, 
Shed more blood than they're worth, 
Like idiot sons. The shape of hope 
Is nevertheless innumerable and rises 
From all the postures and the disguises 
Of loss and defeat and even Europe. 

* 

But whistling in the dark brings images 
Back that were for a moment on a furlough, 
And so my dark is full of mirages 
And voices make a birdcage of my pillow. 

Ill 

And now there is nothing left to celebrate 

But the individual death in a ditch or a plane 

Like a cock o* the north in a hurricane. 

Out of the bogus glory and the synthetic hate, 

The welter of nations and the speeches, O step down 

You corpse in the gold and blue, out of a cloud, 

My dragonfly, step down into your own: 

The ditch and the dislocated wings and the cold 

Kiss of the not to be monumental stone. 



GEORGE BARKER 

This is the only dignity left, the single 

Death without purpose and without understanding 

Like birds boys drop with catapults. Not comprehending 

Denudes us of the personal aim and angle, 

And so we are perfect sacrifice to nothing. 

IV 

Everywhere is our wilderness everywhere. 
I hear the scapegoat's scream wherever I go 
And not only from my throat but also 
Everyone is our scapegoat everyone. 
When by the ilex I lie in the sun 
Thinking I'm free a moment, then the crown 
Of bleeding christian leaves comes down, 
The scapegoat coronation also there. 

Or in a world of palm and anthropoid 
The shape of Darwin gibbering descends 
Out of the leaves of life and from a void 
Condemns me to a beginning and an end. 
Thus everywhere is our wilderness everywhere, 
And everyone is our scapegoat everyone. 

V 

O Golden Fleece she is where she lies tonight 

Trammelled in her sheets like midsummer on a bed, 

Kisses like moths flitter over her bright 

Mouth, and, as she turns her head, 

All space moves over to give her beauty room. 

Where her hand, like a bird on the branch of her arm, 
Droops its wings over the bedside as she sleeps, 

10 



GEORGE BARKER 

There the air perpetually stays warm 

Since, nested, her hand rested there. And she keeps 

Under her green thumb life like a growing poem. 

My nine-tiered tigress in the cage of sex 

I feed with meat that you tear from my side 

Crowning your nine months with the paradox: 

The love that kisses with a homicide 

In robes of red generation resurrects. 

The bride who rides the hymenacal waterfall 
Spawning all possibles in her pools of surplus, 
Whom the train rapes going into a tunnel, 
The imperial multiplicator nothing can nonplus: 
My mother Nature is the origin of it all. 

At Pharaoh's Feast and in the family cupboard, 
Gay corpse, bright skeleton, and the fly in amber, 
She sits with her laws like antlers from her forehead 
Enmeshing everyone, with flowers and thunder 
Adorning the head that destiny never worried. 

LOVE POEM 

Less the dog begged to die in the sky 

Immortal and transfixed, 
Or the tall tree to grow on ground 

Later axed and annexed, 
Than my dark one, my sweet stark one, 

Begged the knife in the breast, 
The long lie, the lying worm in the bed, 

The cheat I attest. 



ii 



GEORGE BARKER 

But bull without a bell I trod 

Among her mysteries, 
Simpleton with a bomb I hid 

Shivering in her caves; 
And her hand came down out of a cloud, 

Her beauty from the shadows 
Emerged and suffered what I did 

To mitigate my sorrows. 



LOVE POEM 

O tender under her right breast 

Sleep at the waterfall 
My daughter, my daughter, and be at rest 

As I at her left shall. 

At night the pigeon in the eaves 

Leaves open its bright eye; 
Nor will the Seven Sisters cease 

To watch you where you lie. 

The pine like a father over your bed 

Will bend down from above 
To lay in duty at your head 

The candles of its love. 

And in their mothering embrace, 

Sleep on the Rockies' bosom; 
The Okanogan Valley shall grace 

Canada round your cradle. 



12 



GEORGE BARKER 

The silver spoon and the one-eyed man, 
The rabbit's foot and the clover, 

Be at your bed from morning till 
As now, the day is over. 

LOVE POEM 

My joy, my jockey, my Gabriel 
Who bares his horns above my sleep 
Is sleeping now. And I shall keep him 
In valley and on pinnacle 
And marvellous in my tabernacle. 

My peace is where his shoulder holds 
My clouds among his skies of face; 
His plenty is my peace, my peace: 
And like a serpent by a boulder 
His shade I rest in glory coiled. 

Time will divide us and the sea 
Wring its sad hands all day between; 
The autumn bring a change of scene. 
But always and for ever he 
At night will sleep and keep by me. 



John Bayliss 
OCTOBER 

It is now the tenth hour of this October night 

with the wind coming in from the sea 

and the balances weighing the chances of war. 

13 



JOHN BAYLISS 

And, as I write, for the fourth year 

Mars stands firm in the ascendant 

and the sea breaks on lonely stones 

under cloud-blur and blare 

of an east wind bringing the sound of guns. 

Where shall we set our histories? 
Who are the errant, the aimless ones 
outside the village boundaries, 
dead meteorites from long dead suns, 
unfree travellers at whose end none stirs. 

The meanest priest preserved from dust 

wound from wind in mummy-cloth 

has more eternity than us 

our character is lost in death 

and what are we to passers-by 

but grey stone in a field of green? 

We have no Arab story here 

to bring us hope of Singing Bird 

or magic water on our hair 

to give us back our former shape. 

Unmarried now we lie alone, 

a gold ring and a skeleton. 

Yeats from darkness drew a tower, 
built to cloud and trod the stair; 
alone upon a barren moor 
communed with wind and star and bird; 
from rifled tomb and sacred book 
bled secrets till his ageing blood 
grew agonies that drove to break 

14 



JOHN BAYLISS 

his wisdom on the sensual rood. 
Aware of creed and craftsman's work, 
he found eternity in this, 
the wild and dancing turns of grace 
young lovers take in the long grass. 

Arc there not, then, two histories? 

Remember Egypt in the Pharaohs' day; 

how the artificer against the dust 

settling, soft, shifting, 

built a sarcophagus to last 

the spirit till it enter its new house. 

Remember dust gathering 

by Nile and Thames, 

still witness among the tombs 

of life defeated. On diadems 

touching, on lips disfiguring, 

covering face and lace, sceptre and king, 

smothering echoes, 

inside door and window deadening, 

insidious as an old man's love-making. 

Imagine how on low divan 

Cleopatra lay, or in great mansion 

Lady took lust's occasion, 

silken the sheets, the coverlet of satin, 

floor richly carpeted, door shut 

lest dust enter on slow foot. 

Fate curtained out, cushions, delight 

torches and wine taken late 

the air scented, aphrodisiac, 

15 



JOHN BAYLISS 

for her sake. 

But candle guttering, lips grown hard, 
eyes tired, hair against gold couch, 
drag to the herd. A grey coach 
drawn up on the gravel, delight hid 
deep under grave or pyramid. 

No water-clock or ormolu, 
sundial, measure made of sand, 
turn for any but Time's hand. 
Only myth and legend lie 
powerful in the memory. 
Isis and Osiris are 
sun and moon, and many a star 
that rose upon an ancient sky 
lives for us and still looks down 
with the same pity and disdain. 

Here in East and West two armies stand 

angering the hot air; their metals bend 

blister and warp; the flies reap 

rich harvest from the dusty mere. 

Here is a cemetery of wire 

where tank and lonely sentry keep 

the buzzard company. A fire 

smokes desultorily. 

Over this battlefield the Medc, 

Phoenician and Arab rode: 

the Pharaohs satisfied their greed 

for power and raging Typhon trod 

swift upon Osiris' heel. 



16 



JOHN BAYLISS 

Weapons made from modern steel 

lie above the ancient bronze 

and new bodies lie above 

Egyptian bones. 

This is a strange universe 

of star-shell, flare and falling bomb, 

where the tall searchlight, like a vase 

stands above metallic rain, 

and the bombers dull as bees 

drone among forgotten stars. 

Day and night among the dunes 

the guns recoil, the long pursuit 

slackens, wavers and returns. 

In Gibraltar yellow fruit 

hangs iin gathered; here lips burn. 

Here what shall ambition gather? 
memories of lying together 
English girl, Circassian, Greek, 
bead or imitation pearl, 
letters coining week by week, 
the hopeless passionate appeal; 
dead faces, the torn photograph 
and here no written epitaph. 

Sennaccherib with golden plaque 
commemorated victories, 
but broken town and sunken ship 
and all the prophesying voices, 
impatience and sarcastic quip 
must suffice for such as these 
who die for profit of a claque. 

Have we not learnt our histories e 



Alison Boodson 



CAROL 



Fire is what's precious now, is 

more than gold and under snow 
the badger sleeps in peace 

dreaming winter away. 

What's precious now is to lie 

close-held guarded warm 
wrapped in like the ship in the bay 

or the coal in the crisp flame. 

All things fold in all things close 

together in kindness 

the lamb to the ewe, the field to the snow 
. the mouth to the breast. 

Turn into me, turn to me, 

you who are cold out there; 
this is the season of charity 

come in by the fire. 

NIGHT ALERT 

A girl awaiting her lover is not more still with fear 
than I am, awaiting your kiss. 

She does not take more pains to win his wonder than I have 
lying here in the dark waiting for you. 



18 



ALISON BOODSON 

All the secrets of joy she holds in her body 
preserving them zealously. 

I also have secrets from you: you will have to force them 

from me 
part of me is still reluctant. 

She hears his tread, feels his breath hot on her check. A last 
panic pervades her, then a long peace. 

if I am afraid when you draw near me, remember o lover o 

death 
I will be tranquil afterwards. 

And now his body and hers arc one, the secrets arc one by 

one unfolded. 
There is no further division between them. 

I too will submit to your love; I too will disclose and reveal, 
and morning shall find us identified forever. 

POEM 

1 do not want to be your weeping woman 
holding you to me with a chain of sorrow. 

1 can more easily stand the flame of your anger 
than the frost of your kisses empty of desire. 

1 do not want to be your gentle lover 
drawing you to me on a rope of pity. 



ALISON BOODSON 

Sooner that you never touched me than that you ever 
should touch me from a distance made of mercy. 

I do not want to be your second mother 
always forgiving and smiling and never loving. 

If you forget me, forget me utterly. Never 

come to my arms without interest. I shall know it. 

I do not want to be your weeping woman 
pinning you to me on a sword of tears. 

POEM 

He lying spilt like water from a bowl 

himself the shadow of his own passion 
probes with his secret fingers my terrible 
' need and sees it is beyond reason. 

The dark head laid like dreams on a bare pillow 

once was dreams only but now stirs 
under my kiss and slowly slowly 

he wakes and remembers. 

O gifts his hands are on my happy breasts; 

he is all warmth and all kindness 
in his long arms I sleep at last, 

and peace is in his kiss. 

March 1946: for J. N. 



20 



Brenda Chamberlain 



POEM 



You, who in April laughed, a green god in the sun; 
Sang in the bowel-rock below me 
Words unknown, but how familiar-strange 
Your voice and presence. Other quests 
But led to this, to lie unseen and watch, 
From cloud-ascending rib and slab of stone 
Your downward passage, greendrake garmented; 
A blade of wheat, watered in desolation. 

love in exile now, 

1 keep the hill-paths open for you; call 

The shifting screes, warm rock, the corniced snows 
To witness, that no wall 
Precipitous, ice-tongued, shall ever stand 
Between us, though we rot to feed the crow. 

SONG-TALYSARN 

Bone-aged is my white horse; 
Blunted is the share; 
Broken the man who through sad land 
Broods on the plough. 

Bone-bright was my gelding once; 
Burnished was the blade; 
Beautiful the youth who in green Spring 
Broke earth with song. 



21 



BRF.NDA CHAMBERLAIN 

LAMENT 

My man is a bone ringed with weed. 

Thus it was on my bridal night, 

That the sea, risen to a green wall 

At our window, quenching love's new delight, 

Stood curved between me and the midnight call 

Of him who said I was so fair 

He could drown for joy in the salt of my hair. 

We sail, he said, 

Like the placid dead 

That have long forgotten the marriage bed. 

On my bridal night 
Brine stung the window. 
Alas, in every night since then 
.These eyes have rained 
For him who made my heart sing 
At the lifting of the latch, 
For him that will not come again 
Weary from the sea. 

The wave tore his bright flesh in her greed: 
My man is a bone ringed with weed. 



SONG 

Heron is harsh with despair 
For the felled pine of the upland: 
Curlew is torn in her love 
For the sea and the hill. 



BRENDA CHAMBERLAIN 

Heart iii my breast is a stone 
That my man cannot hold me 
When hawthorn and plum are 
Brave with the blossom of Spring. 

DEAD PONIES 

There is death enough in Europe without these 
dead horses on the mountain. 
(They are the underlining, the emphasis of death.) 
It is not wonderful that when they live 
their eyes are shadowed under mats of hair. 
Despair and famine do not gripe so hard 
When the bound earth and sky are kept remote 
behind clogged hairs. 

The snow engulfed them, pressed their withered haunches flat, 
filled up their nostrils, burdened the cage of their ribs. 
The snow retreated. Their bodies stink to heaven, 
Potently crying out to raven, hawk, and dog, 
Come pick us clean, cleanse our fine bones of blood. 

They were never lovely save as foals 

before their necks grew long, uncrested; 

but the wildness of the mountain was in their stepping, 

the pride of Spring burnt in their haunches; 

they were tawny as rushes of the marsh. 

The prey-birds have had their fill and preen their feathers: 
soft entrails have gone to make the hawk arrogant. 



Alex Comfort 



THE LOVERS 

Across the round field, under the dark male tower 

drift the two horses, the chestnut and the black, 

aloof and quiet as two similar clouds 

alike and distant, heads toward the wind 

and the grass a green pool under moving clouds, 

under the sickle gulls, the grey-eyed screaming girls. 

Only at night around the standing tower 

the stallion's white teeth in the brown mare's shoulder 

those eight hoofs fly like thunder in the wind, 

like water falling under the night's drum. 

FEAR OF THE EARTH 

In these cold evenings, when the rain 
streams, and the leaves stand closer shuffling feet 
the woods grow perilous. They are hungry, the trees, 
eavesdropping, sending long shoots to tap the pane. 

I can hear you, root, under my hearthstone moving; 

white finger, longer since yesterday, nearer 

the marrow. In these evenings 

the earth leans closer: stones quietly jostle. 

I can hear you, under my foot bending 

your strange finger. I have heard 

cold fruits of my flesh plotted, soft globes swaying 

have known of my skin a leaf foreshadowed. 

24 



ALEX COMFORT 

The captive roses jostle under the hedge. 
The celandine is innocent. Underneath 
her finger fumbles eyeholes. Every petal 
speaks man not hardy nor perennial. 

The trees grow perilous. The patient dandelion 
should not remain at large in our terrible garden. 

THE POSTURES OF LOVR 



I saw a woman in a green field 

Threading upon her hands the bright beads of song 

threading her voice among the tall bright ears 

and her skin like the skin of water lay 

over her body where the light was moving 

and from her breasts the daisies dropped like milk 

there sang a woman in a field^of ears 

under a midday heavy as a shroud 

and on its windless pool her white song fell 

and when the song moved the crop moved with it 
and the skyline's blue dust began to rise 
the milky flowers in its upright wind 

and from the hedges her song called white children 
and from the dropping tree above her head 
her song's long finger shook a river down 

there sang a woman in a field of ears 
and her song like bright beads scattered 
fell round her thighs among the grass 

25 



ALEX COMFORT 



for this song is living, is time 

no virgin knows this song but women only 



There is a white mare that my love keeps 
unridden in a hillside meadow white 
as a white pebble, veined like a stone 
a white horse, whiter than a girl 

And now for three nights sleeping I have seen 
her body naked as a tree for marriage 
pale as a stone that the net of water covers 

and her veined breasts like hills the swallow islands 
still on the corn's green water: and I know 
her dark hairs gathered round an open rose 

her pebbles lying under the dappled sea. 
And I will ride her thighs' white horses. 

3 

In the stony night move the stars' white mouths 
a net of mouths is looking for food 
I think we are their food 

they will unlock our fingers, even if we lie 

closer than bone to bone closer than the grave's 

white tangled dancers. The streams and the sea will help them 

we shall not be able to touch each other 
when we feel cold. Somewhere I saw 
two Christian lovers waiting in the sand 
and round them went the lion, like the stars 

26 



ALEX COMFORT 



in that last minute feeling each others flesh 

and love whose silence, like the bright silence of wind 

washes the trees and islands until night: 

till their joined hands sink in a darkness of sand 



This was Briseis' way: she was a bridge, 
a white flute for her master's fingers 
he smelling of war and she of woman 
breaking her wheeling waves against his rock 

This was Milanion's way (the crowd gone home, 
and she, trembling to be alone with him) 
pinioned his white swan there after the race 
and made her thighs a necklace of his own 

or this was Helen's way, she, a dark mare 
let down her mane, his mouth upon her nape 
kneeling, a penitent, her face hidden, 
and feeling only Paris in his hands 

This was Octavia's way, the rider's way 
straight like a candle, her hair a flame, 
and outstretched Anthony saw in her half-light 
her white horse galloping beside his own 

or this was Lais' way, an outspread ship 
arid he a swimmer on her whitening pool 
spanning her hollows with his open hand 
wide opened, like a county or a star 



27 



ALEX COMFORT 

And then the sleep, in various figures, still 
his face between her breasts, and she awake 
holding him sleeping, listening to the clocks 

5 

The moon fills up its hollow bowl of milk 
bodies grow blue like pebbles in a stream 
and light falls like a wind in summer stripping 
girls into statues, showing their round limbs 
moving but frozen under the watery cloth: 
tonight I watch her mask move into sleep 
her breathing like a bee on a wood's floor 
coming and going to and from the light 

She is my field, and in her furrows run 
my ways like rain, and the crops of her shadows 
are pools, are a wild sea. And she has mountains 
stranger than feathers, hard as fishes. There 
fall in her hollows shadows of orchard trees 
that follow the moon's circle like a tide 
grassy nets that move on the dropped apples. 

Body, white continent 

on all whose beaches break the seas of years 
this is the surf they say the dying hear. 
We both are islands, and our grassy edge 
creeps inwards, like the healing of a wound. 
And the windy light is time, a limitless water, 
a white sea lying restless as a hand 

where no rock rests the gull, and no tree stands 
ever, forever moving, lifeless, alone. 

28 



ALEX COMFORT 

PICK UPON PICK . . . 

Pick upon pick in the sun at the sea edge 
the prisoners sing and longer the raw trench 
runs, and the hourglass white sand marks their time 
and the tide treads its limits, flat as oil 

At night the sea falls sharper, the moon fills 

their footprints up, and crowding from far out 

the waves press earnestly on the streaming edge 

of the wire-bright tidemark, and still the prisoners sing 

while in their sleep the diggers' feet tread home 

Such voices over the wet sand and fields 
as carry far inland, restless as a wheel 
one long uneasy seaborne howl, the concourse 
of voices worn by space to a wordless cry 

a shadow of smoke that crosses fields at night 
and the sleeping town that turns in its bed can catch 
no words but the coming and going hum, the hands 
that thunder on doors, o brothers, and is afraid 

to hear the prisoners singing in the sea. 



NOTES FOR MY SON 

Remember when you hear them beginning to say Freedom 
Look carefully see who it is that they want you to butcher. 

Remember, when you say that the old trick would not have 

fooled you for a moment 

That every time it is the trick which seems new. 

29 



ALEX COMFORT 

Remember that you will have to put in irons 
Your better nature, if it will desert to them. 

Remember, remember their faces watch them carefully: 
For every step you take is on somebody's body 

And every cherry you plant for them is a gibbet 
And every furrow you turn for them is a grave 

Remember, the smell of burning will not sicken you 
If they persuade you that it will thaw the world 

Beware. The blood of a child does not smell so bitter 
If you have shed it with a high moral purpose. 

So that because the woodcutter disobeyed 
they will not burn her today or any day 

So that for lack of a joiner's obedience 
The crucifixion will not now take place 

So that when they come to sell you their bloody corruption 
You will gather the spit of your chest 
And plant it in their faces. 



SONG FOR THE HEROES 

I wonder sometimes if the soldiers lying 

under the soil, wrapped in their coats like beggars 

sleeping under an arch, their hands filled with leaves 



ALEX COMFORT 

could take vengeance for once on the men who sent them, 
coming back like beggars, seeing the homes and fields 
that their obedience lost to them, the men of all countries 

whether they would have anything to say 

as ghosts at frosty windows to sons or brothers 

other than this " Obedience is death." 

If you are willing to die, then choose obedience. 

"We who are here now, men of all nations, 
our hands full of twigs, stones on our eyes, 
half-afraid of what we have done (but that is forgotten 

a short wild dream, when we were other men 
not ourselves but now we are ourselves again 
tradesmen, farmers, students it is we who are telling you) 

you must choose carefully, for your life, and not only your life 
will depend on it, in years or days, between believing 
like us, that by obedience you could help or profit 

the land, the fields, the people; and saying "Death is obe- 
dience." 

"Because we know now that every cause is just 
and time does not discriminate between the aggressor 
and the dead child, the Regrettable Necessity 

and the foul atrocity the grass is objective 

and turns all citizens into green mounds 

we have had time, as soldiers always have time, 

31 



ALEX COMFORT 

resting before Plataea. or Dunkirk or Albuhera 

to think about obedience though we will still spring up 

at the whistle; it is too late to withdraw that someone must 

pay 
for all this, and it will be the people. 

"We have nothing to tell you but this: to choose carefully 

and if you must still obey, we are ready, 

your fathers, grandfathers, great-grandfathers, to find you 

a place at our dry table, to greet you as soldiers 
with a dry nod, and sit, elbow to elbow 
silently for always under the sky of soil: 

but know you are choosing. When they begin to appeal 
to your better nature, your righteous indignation, 
your pity for men like yourselves, stand still, 

look down and see the lice upon your hide. 

4 'It may be that you, or else your children, at last 
will put down your hand and crush them. But if not 
remember that we are waiting, good men as you, 

not fools, but men who knew the price of obeying, 
the lice for what they were, the Cause for a fraud, 
hoped for no good and cherished no illusions; 

and we will see your mounds spring up in clusters 
beside our own, and welcome you with a nod, 
crucified like us all, all fellow-ghosts together, 



ALEX COMFORT 

not fooled by the swine, but going with open eyes. 

44 You have only to speak once they will melt like smoke, 
you have only to meet their eyes they will go 
howling like devils into bottomless death 

but if you choose to obey, we shall not blame you 
for every lesson is new. We will make room for you 
in this cold hall, where every cause is just. 

Perhaps you will go with us to frosty windows 
putting the same choice as the years go round 
eavesdropping when the Gadarenes call our children 

or sit debating when will they disobey? 

wrapped in our coats against the impartial cold." 
All this I think the buried men would say 
clutching their white ribs and their rusted helmets 

nationless bones, under the still ground. 



Keith Douglas 

LEUKOTHEA 

When you were alive, my Leukothea 

your loveliness was puzzling 

and only I knew the processes 

by which my ornament lived and breathed. 

And when you died 

I was persuaded to store you in the earth, 

33 



KEITH DOUGLAS 

and I remember when they put you there 

your too expressive living eye 

being covered by the dark eyelash 

and by its lid for a cerement. 

At that moment those who looked at you 

wondered, I know, how you could be made 

in such exquisite material, 

and I would not explain for the world. 

Even when they put the soil above you 

they saw its unusual texture. The very grass 

was a strange plant, previous as emeralds. 

So all these years I have lived securely. I knew 

I had only to uncover you 

to see how the careful earth would have kept 

all as it was, untouched. I trusted -the ground 

I knew the worm and the beetle would go by 

and never dare batten on your beauty. 

Last night I dreamed and found my trust betrayed 
only the little bones and the great ones, disarranged. 

TIME EATING 

Ravenous Time has flowers for his food 
in Autumn, yet can cleverly make good 
each petal; devours animals and men, 
but for ten dead he can create ten. 

If you enquire how secretly you've come 
to mansize from the smallness of a stone 
it will appear his effort made you rise 
so gradually to your proper size. 

34 



KEITH DOUGLAS 

But as he makes he eats; the very part 
where he began, even the elusive heart, 
Time's ruminative tongue will wash 
and slow juice masticate all flesh. 

That volatile huge intestine holds 

material and abstract in its folds: 

thought and ambition melt and even the world 

will alter, in that catholic belly curled. 

But Time, who ate my love, you cannot make 

such another; you who can remake 

the lizard's tail and the bright snakeskin 

cannot, cannot. That you gobbled in 

too quick, and though you brought me from a boy 

you can make no more of me, only destroy. 

CANOE 

Well, I am thinking this may be my last 
summer, but cannot lose even a part 
of pleasure in the old-fashioned art of 
idleness. I cannot stand aghast 

at whatever doom hovers in the background: 
while grass and buildings and the somnolent river, 
who know they are allowed to last for ever, 
exchange between them the whole subdued sound 

of this hot time. What sudden fearful fate 
can alter my shade wandering next year 
from a return? Whistle and I will hear 

35 



KEITH DOUGLAS 

and come again another evening when this boat 
travels with you alone towards Iffley: 

as you lie looking up for thunder again, 

this cool touch does not betoken rain; 

it is my spirit that kisses your mouth lightly. 

ON A RETURN FROM EGYPT 

To stand here in the wings of Europe 

disheartened, I have come away 

from the sick land where in the sun lay 

the gentle sloe-eyed murderers 

of themselves, exquisites under a curse; 

here to exercise my depleted fury. 

For the heart is a coal, growing colder 
when jewelled cerulean seas change 
into grey rocks, grey water-fringe, 
sea and sky altering like a cloth 
rill colour and sheen are gone both: 
cold is an opiate of the soldier. 

And all my endeavours are unlucky explorers 

come back, abandoning the expedition; 

the specimens, the lilies of ambition 

still spring in their climate, still unpicked: 

but time, rime is all I lacked 

to find them, as the great collectors before me. 

The next month, then, is a window 
and with a crash I'll split the glass. 

36 



KEITH DOUGLAS 

Behind it stands one I must kiss, 
person of love or death 
a person or a wraith 
I fear what I shall find. 

THE OFFENSIVE 

Written in Egypt shortly before Montgomery's attack 

To-night's a moonlit cup 
and holds the liquid time 
that^will run out in flame 

jR 

in poison we shall sup. 

The moon's at home in a passion 

of foreboding. Her lord, 

the martial sun, abroad 

this month will see time fashion 

the action we begin 
and Time will cage again 
the devils we let run 
whether we lose or win. 

In the month's dregs will 
a month hence some descry 
the too late prophecy 
of what the month lets fall. 

This overture of quiet 
is a minute to think on 
the quiet like a curtain 
when the piece is complete. 

37 



KEITH DOUGLAS 

So in conjecture stands 

my starlit body; the mind 

mobile as a fox sneaks round 

the sleepers waiting for their wounds. 

This overture of quiet 
is a minute to think on 
the quiet like a curtain 
when the piece is complete. 

REMEMBER ME 

Remember me when I am dead 
and simplify me when I'm dead. 

As the processes of earth 

strip off the colour and the skin: 

take the brown hair and blue eye 

and leave me simpler than at birth, 
when hairless I came howling in 
as the moon entered the cold sky. 

Of my skeleton perhaps, 

so stripped, a learned man will say 

"He was of such a type and intelligence," no more. 

Thus when in a year collapse 
particular memories, you may 
deduce, from the long pain I bore 

the opinions I held, who was my foe 
and what I left, even my appearance, 
but incidents will be no guide. 

38 



KEITH DOUGLAS 

Time's wrong-way telescope will show 
a minute man ten years hence 
and by distance simplified. 

Through the lens see if I seem 
Substance or nothing: of the world 
deserving mention or charitable oblivion, 

not by momentary spleen 
or love into decision hurled, 
leisurely arrive at an opinion. 

Remember me when I am dead 
and simplify me when I'm dead. 

A ROUND NUMBER 

The monotonous evil clock 
is creeper-climbing on my heart 
and with rank ivy will pull down 
my hope of happiness and renown. 

My sacred lady who needs no art 
gives an idiot place to mock. 

I know the fragrant girl is dead, 
and perished with my innocence 
and died two hundred years ago: 
or twice that time if Time is slow. 

And so reflect for recompense 
She only lived inside my head. 

39 



KEITH DOUGLAS 

Then she is gone, I still remember 
my early promise, looking for 
obliging fame to make amends, 
and here my last existence ends. 

For I cannot feed hope any more 

and Time has reached a round number. 



POEM 

These grasses, ancient enemies 
waiting at the edge of towns, 
conceal a movement of live stones, 
the lizards with hooded eyes 
of hostile miraculous age. 

It is not snow on the green spurs 
of hilltops, only towns of white 
whose trees are populous with fruit; 
with girls whose velvet beauty is 
handed down to them, gentle ornaments. 

Somewhere in the hard land 
and vicious scrub, or fertile place 
of women and productive trees 
you think you see a devil stand 
fronting a creature of good intention, 

or fair apples where the snake plays 
don't you? Sweet leaves but poisonous, 
or a mantrap in a gay house, 
a murderer with a lover's face, 
seem to you the signs of this country? 

40 



KEITH DOUGLAS 

But devil and angel do not fight, 

they are the classic Gemini 

for whom it's vital to agree 

whose interdependent state 

this two-faced country reflects. Curiously 

though foreigners we surely shall 
prove this background's complement, 
the kindly visitors who meant 
so well all winter but at last fell 
unaccountably to killing in the spring. 



Adam Drinan 

i 

LOVE SONG 

Soft as the wind your hair, 

gull-gleaming your breasts. 

I hoard no treasure there. 

I do not grope for rest. 

I seek you as my home, 

that all your sensitive life 

may fuse into my own, 

and the world match with my wife. 

I carry you out of this 
to no enchanted isle. 
Blood is tart in our kiss, 
and no dream in your smile. 
Bitter, bitter the hours 

4* 



ADAM DRINAN 

and coasts of our patrol, 
Foggy tnis Minch of ours, 
But I sail with your soul. 

I come to you in the flame 
of a burst and broken land. 
There is acid in my brain 
and withering in my hand. 
Your touch will plot us wise, 
your quiet keep it true; 
and joy be the starlight 
to what we have to do. 

II 

Graceful as butterfly orchid 
fresh as wet birches in sunshine 
bright as the pearly wheatear 

whenever she leaves them 
lambs and collie pups follow her. 

Modest, patient, as sundew 
loyal as collie to master 
sagacious as mountain-doe 

whenever she leaves them 
eyes of the old folk follow her. 

Despite the pines and the heather 

Death holds her by the breast; 

as surprised, and resigned, they will be 

whenever she leaves them, 
as when each of her sisters follows her. 

42 



ADAM DRIKAN 
III 

Our pastures are bitten and bare 
our wool is blown to the winds 
our mouths are stopped and dumb 
our oatfields weak and thin. 
Nobody fishes the loch 
nobody stalks the deer. 
Let us go down to the sea. 
The friendly sea likes to be visited. 

Our fathers sleep in the cemetery 
their boats, cracked, by their side. 
The sea turns round in his sleep 
pleasurecraft nod on the tide. 
Sea ducks slumber on waves 
sea eagles have flown away. 
Let us put out to sea. 
The fat sea likes to be visited. 

Fat sea, what's on your shelf? 
all the grey night we wrestled. 
To muscle, to skill, to petrol, 
Hook oo rin yoL. one herring! 
and of that only the head. 
Dogfishes had the rest, 
a parting gift from the sea. 
The merry sea likes to be visited. 

Merry sea, what have you sent us? 
a rusty english trawler? 
The crew put into the hotel 
the engineer overhauls her. 

,43 



ADAM DRINAN 

Gulls snatch offal to leeward. 
We on the jetty unite 
gifts of the cod we can't afford... 
The free sea likes to be visited. 

Free were our fathers' boats 

whose guts are strewn on the shore. 

Steamships were bought by the rich 

cheap from the last war. 

They tear our nets to pieces 

and the sea gives them our fishes. 

Even he favours the rich. 

The false sea likes to be visited. 



Lawrence Durrell 
DELOS 

(For Diana Gould) 

On charts they fall like lace, 

Islands consuming in a sea 

Born dense with its own blue 

And like repairing mirrors holding up 

Small towns and trees and rivers 

To the still air, the lovely air, 

From the clear side of springing Time 

In clement places where the windmills ride 

Turning over grey springs in Mykonos, 

In shadows with a gesture of content. 

44 



LAWRENCE DURRELL 

The statues of the dead here 

Embark on sunlight, sealed 

Each in her model with the sightless eyes, 

The modest stones of Greeks 

Who gravely interrupted death by pleasure. 

And in harbours softly fallen 

The liver-coloured sails, 

Sharp-featured brigantines with eyes, 

Ride in reception so like women 

The pathetic faculty of girls 

To register and utter a desire 

In the arms of men upon the new-mown waters, 

Follow the wind with their long shining keels 

Aimed across Delos at a star. 

THIS UNIMPORTANT MORNING 

This unimportant morning 

Something goes singing where 

The capes turn over on their sides 

And the warm Adriatic rides 

Her blue and sun washing 

At the edge of the world and its brilliant cliffs. 

Day rings in the higher airs 
Pure with cicadas and slowing 
Like a pulse to smoke from farms, 
Extinguished in the exhausted earth, 
Unclenching like a fist and going. 

Tress, fume, cool, pour and overflowing 
Unstretch the feathers of birds and shake 

45 



LAWRENCE DURREIL 

Carpets in windows, brush with dew 
The up-and-doing, and young lovers now 
Their little resurrections make. 

And now lightly to kiss all whom sleep 
Stitched up and wake, my darling, wake; 
The impatient Boatman has been waiting 
Under the house, his long oars folded up 
Like wings in waiting on the darkling lake. 

TO PING-KU, ASLEEP 

You sleeping child asleep, away 

Between the confusing world of forms, 

The lamplight and the day; you lie 

And the pause flows through you like glass, 

Asleep in the body of the nautilus. 

Between comparison and sleep, 

Lips that move in quotation; 

The turning of a small blind mind 

Like a plant everywhere ascending. 

Now our love has become a beanstalk. 

Invent a language where the terms 
Are smiles; someone in the house now 
Only understands warmth and cherish, 
Still twig-bound, learning to fly. 

This hand exploring the world makes 
The diver's deep-sea fingers on the sills 
Of underwater windows; all the wrecks 

46 



LAWRENCE DURRELL 

Of our world where the sad blood leads back 
Through memory and sense like divers working. 

Sleep, my dear, we won't disturb 
You, lying in the zones of sleep. 
The four walls symbolise love put about 
To hold in silence which so soon brims 
Over into sadness: it's still dark. 

Sleep and rise a lady with a flower 
Between your teeth and a cypress 
Between your thighs: surely you won't ever 
Be puzzled by a poem or disturbed by a poem 
Made like fire by the rubbing of two sticks ? 

EIGHT ASPECTS OF MELISSA 
i: BY THE LAKE 

If seen by many minds at once your image 
As in a prism falling breaks itself, 
Or looking upwards from a gleaming spoon 
Defies: a smile squeezed up and vanishing 
In roundels of diversion like the moon. 

Yet here you are confirmed by the smallest 

Wish or kiss upon the rising darkness 

But rootless as a wick afloat in water, 

Fatherless as shoes walking over dead leaves; 

A patient whom no envy stirs but joy 

And what the harsh chords of your experience leave 

This dark soft eye, so liquid now and hoarse 
With pleasure: or your arms in mirrors 

47 



LAWRENCE DURRELL 

Combing out softly hair 

As lovely as a planet's and remote. 

How many several small forevers 
Whispered in the rind of the ear 
Melissa, by this Mediterranean sea-edge, 
Captured and told? 
How many additions to the total silence? 

Surely we increased you by very little, 

But as with a net or gun to make your victims men? 

2: THE NIGHT 

Cut from the joints of this immense 
Darkness up the face of Egypt lying, 
We move in the possession of our acts 
Alone, the dread apostles of our weakness. 

For look. The mauve street is swallowed 
And the bats have begun to stitch slowly. 
At the stable-door the carpenter's three sons 
Bend over a bucket of burning shavings 
Warming their inwardness and quite unearthly 
As the candle-marking time begins. 

Three little magi under vast Capella, 
Beloved of all as shy as the astronomer, 
She troubles heaven with her golden tears, 
Tears flowing down upon us at this window, 
The children rapt, the mauve street swallowed, 
The harps of flame among the shadows 
In Egypt now and far from Nazareth. 



LAWRENCE DURRELL 
3: THE ADEPTS 

Some, the great Adepts, found it 
A lesser part of them ashes and thorns 
Where this sea-sickness on a bed 
Proved nothing calm and virginal, 
But animal, unstable, heavy as lead. 

Some wearied for a sex 

Like a science of known relations: 

A God proved through the flesh or else a mother. 

They dipped in this huge pond and found it 

An ocean of shipwrecked mariners instead, 

Cried out and foundered, losing one another. 

But some sailed into this haven 
Laughing, and completely undecided, 
Expecting nothing more 
Than the mad friendship of bodies, 
And farewells undisguised by pride: 

They wrote those poems the diminutives of madness 
While at a window some one stood and cried. 

4: THE ENCOUNTER 

At this the last yet second meeting, 
Almost the autumn was postponed for us 
Season when the fermenting lovers lie 
Among the gathered bunches quietly. 

So formal was it, so incurious: 
The chime of glasses, the explorer, 

49 



LAWRENCE DURRELL 

The soldier and the secret agent 
With a smile inviting like a target. 

Six of a summer evening, you remember. 

The painful rehearsal of the smile 

And the words: "I am going into a decline, 

Promised by summer but by winter disappointed/' 

The face was turned as sadly as a hare's, 
Provoked by prudence and discretion to repeat: 
"Some of them die, you know, or go away. 
Our denials are only gestures can we help it?" 

Turn to another aspect of the thing. 
The cool muslin dress shaken with flowers 
It was not the thought that was unworthy 
Knowing all you knew, it was the feeling. 

Idly turning from the offered tea I saw 

As swimmers see their past, in the lamplight 

Burning, particular, fastidious and lost 

Your figure forever in the same place, 

Same town and country, sorting letters 

On a green table from many foreign cities, 

The long hare's features, the remarkable sad face. 

5: PBTRON, THE DESERT FATHER 

Waterbirds sailing upon the darkness 

Of Mareotis, this was the beginning: 

Dry reeds touched by the shallow beaks he heard 

On the sand trash of an estuary near Libya, 

This dense yellow lake, ringing now 

With the unsupportable accents of the Word. 

50 



LAWRENCE DURRELL 

Common among the commoners of promise 

He illustrated to the ordinary those 

Who found no meaning in the flesh's weakness- 

The elegant psychotics on their couches 

In Alexandria, hardly tempted him, 

With talk of business, war and lovely clothes. 

The lemon-skinned, the gold, the half-aware 
Were counters for equations he examined, 
Grave as their statues fashioned from the life; 
A pioneer in pleasure on the long 
Linen-shaded colonnades he often heard 
Girls' lips puff in the nostrils of the fife. 

Now dense as clouded urine moved the lake 
Whose waters were to be his ark and fort 
By the harsh creed of water-fowl and snake, 
To the wave-polished stone he laid his ear 
And said: "I dare not ask for what I hope, 
And yet I may not speak of what I fear/' 

6: THE RISING SUN 

Now the sun again, like a bloody convict, 

Comes up on us, the wheels of everything 

Hack and catch the luckless rising; 

The newly married, the despairing, 

The pious ant and groom, 

Open like roses in the darkened bed-room. 

The bonds are out and the debentures 

Shape the coming day's adventures, 

The revising of money by strategy or tears 

51 



LAWRENCE DURRBLL 

And here we lie like riders on a cloud 
Whom kisses only can inform 
In breath exhaling twenty-thousand years 
Of curses on the sun but not too loud, 

While the days of judgment keep, 
Lucky ladies sleek with sleep, 
Lucky ladies sleek with sleep. 

7: VISITATIONS 

Left like an unknown's breath on mirrors, 

The enchanters, the persuaders 

Whom the seasons swallow up, 

Only leave us ash in saucers, 

Or to mice the last invaders 

Open cupboard-doors or else 

Lipstick-marks upon a cup. 

Fingerprint the crook of time, 
Ask him what he means by it, 
Eyes and thoughts and lovely bodies, 
David's singing, Daphne's wit 
Like Eve's apple undigested 
Rot within us bit by bit. 

Experience in a humour ends, 
Wrapped in its own dark metaphor, 
And divining winter breaks: 
Now one by one the Hungers creep 
Up from the orchards of the mind 
Here to trouble and confuse 
Old men's after-dinner sleep. 

52 



LAWRENCE DURRELL 

8: A PROSPECT OF CHILDREN 

All summer watch the children in the public garden, 
The tribe of children wishing you were like them 
These gruesome little artists of the impulse 
For whom the perfect anarchy sustains 
A brilliant apprehension of the present, 
In games of joy, of love or even murder 
On this green springing grass will empty soon 
A duller opiate, Loving, to the drains. 

Cast down like asterisks among their toys, 

Divided by the lines of daylight only 

From adventure, crawl among the rocking-horses, 

And the totems, dolls and animals and rings 

To the tame suffix of a nursery sleep 

Where all but few of them 

The restless inventories of feeling keep. 

Sleep has no walls. Sleep admits 

The great Imago with its terror, yet they lie 

Like something baking, candid cheek on finger, 

With folded Up and eye 

Each at the centre of the cobweb seeking 

His boy or girl, begotten and confined 

In terror like the edges of a table 

Begot by passion and confirmed in error. 

What can they tell the watcher at the window, 
Writing letters, smoking up there alone, 
Trapped in the same limitation of his growth 
And yet not envying them their childhood 
Since he endured his own? 

53 



Patrick Evans 

AT MORNING AN IRIS 

The dead do not specially depress me. 
The happiest hour of my life 
Was in an Athenian cemetery 
In the green of the gold of the light 
Of the grass where they grew underfoot. 
Something kept coming up through 
From their bones, the root and the fruit 
Of their past, and the present, and me. 
All was one, and as wide as the blue 
Aegean, impersonal, fresh, and free. 

But the dead do most specially impress me 

As some of the living do 

Not only the men and women 

(Man is so self-important) but three 

Beasts: the bull, the fish and the bee. 

For these, like the dead and the living, 

Warmer, more bright and more wise 

Without learning, keep wisdom of flowers, 

The power of a goddess's thighs 

(Pallas Athene or Venus). 

The fisherman combs out the lea 

Of the starfish inhabited sea 

With his nets for his bread; and all these 

Share with the peaceful dead 

In their tombs, with their potsherds and toys, 

Their tokens, their terrors and joys, 

Their broken and painted memories, 

The whispering threat of the terrible seas, 

54 



PATRICK EVANS 

The memento mori, the pleasure of bread 

That the teeth cut; the crackle and apprehension 

That invade the room when my lover 

At morning, an iris, 

Combs her electrical head. 

GREEN GRASS GROWING 

Green grass growing upward splits the concrete pavement. 

Who shall tell us of the loveliness of women? 

Their words are water, all the fond describers'. 

The green grass growing splits the concrete pavement. 

No man living tells the majesty of women. 

The river flows away, the imperial Thames. 

The wrist watch and the alarum clock run, oh, they run down 

But no one knows the majesty of women, 

The depth of those their bodies, time's soft river. 

Clocks run down, but time obeys no watch, 

Time stays the same, while fade the imperial women. 

The buttocks are an empire and the breasts 

Two Indias, while the escarpment of the spine 

Is lonely as the Andes. Who loves the Andes, 

Who shall expound the loneliness of women, 

Women most loved but never understood, 

Their sex enduring as the enormous Andes, 

Their throats where desire croaks and cowslips grow, 

Eyes whose betrayal speaks but utters never a sound? 

The taxis dart and overtake the buses, 
The colours are bastard and the time is true. 
Who shall explain the majesty of women 
To us? to us? Exaltation, softness, pleasure. 

55 



Gavin Ewart 



POEM 



To go, to leave the classics and the buildings 
So tall and false and intricate with spires, 
To run in joy from the imagined wood 
As children who have never heard of good, 
To feed the flames of the forgotten fires. 

This is my wish but my wish cannot be. 
At times I should be dead like skull or stone 
Or living with the slow life of a tree 
Or half-asleep as one would think the sea 
Or anything content to be alone. 

Not living like this, ticking of a clock, 
Afraid of friends and cataloguing wants, 
Knowing so little, wanting far too much . . . 
What else is tenderness but touch? 
And what so far from me, though nearer once; 

MISS TWYE 

Miss Twye was soaping her breasts in her bath 
When she heard behind her a meaningful laugh 
And to her amazement she discovered 
A wicked man in the bathroom cupboard. 



G. S. Eraser 



SONNET 

My simple heart, bred in provincial tenderness, 
And my cold mind, that takes the world for theme, 
With local pain, with universal remedy, 
Avert the real, disturb the noble dream: 

And if my hand could touch you timidly, 
Or I could laugh with you, and worry less 
About the loud guns laughing over Europe, 
I might find a local remedy, a province's hope: 

Or if I had the hard steel mind of Lenin, 
The skill, or even the rage of Catiline 
Against the corrdpt, the comfortable. Then in 

The pages of history one page might be mine. 
But for my heart my mind must lose its scope, 
And for my mind my heart must give up hope. 



CRISIS 

My room as usual a disorder of books, 

Nothing to my hand, my clothes flung on a chair, 

My desk squalid and fussy with useless papers, 

I had shut myself up from the clean shock of day. 

I was asleep: like a criminal, without dreams, 

There was nothing I desired but my own pride. 



57 



G. S. FRASEK 

Then it seemed to me the earth opened, 
I was on a green slope, an unsafe hillside, 
With rocks there and rivers; there was that lady 
And one man, my enemy. We three clung together 
And rolled down the hill. The river whelmed, 
I gripped her greedily. Then came sorrow, 
She was not with me, I drowned alone: 
That man mocked on the bank. 

I almost awakened, 

But sorrow and sleep together bind fast. 
Falling far, I came to a strange city, 
No one knew me, I walked in sorrow alone. 
Past smoke-black brick and yellow muslin curtains, 
Vainly round interminable corners, 
For these streets were familiar and not familiar 
(The old tenements of Glasgow and my childhood) 
And I knew I would never find my own house. 

Then I met myself in my dream, I said clearly, 
"I am going soon, take care of yourself, find friends/" 
But my own eyes looked through me, my voice said, 
"Traitor!" 

And I saw then 

All the terrible company of the defeated, 

Lost but in the courage of shapes of stone: 

The stone mouths of the rigid orators, 

The elbow half-lifted in a thousand club-rooms 

And the steady hand on the trigger turned to stone: 

Then I awoke, sweating: I came out to the window, 

In the evening light saw the snow grey on the ground, 

I turned to my darkening room, I saw my papers 

58 



G. S. FRASER 

Scattered about, my life too lately 

Had been all in bits. "My God," I said, "there is something 

Far wrong, certainly, somewhere. But with me or the world?" 

A POEM ABOUT LOVE 

All that I got from love 
Was the impulse to write 
Verse for my own and others' 
But seldom her delight, 

Her whom my verse transforms 
As the plain image in time 
Loses particular presence 
In the tapestry of rhyme, 

That flowing tapestry 
Where mingled like a stream 
All possible delights 
And lost fulfillments gleam: 

And time transforms her, too, 
And all her light would die 
But for this echo, this effect, 
This agonising cry. 

What image is intact 
From all that brilliant crowd 
But those that wrung my heart 
And made me cry aloud? 



59 



G. S. FRASER 

ELEGY 

The waxen and the false grace of tulips, 
The scentless heads in many drawing-rooms, 
Pursue what I write, like the piano-note, 
The velvet dress, and the cake-crumbs, 

And the path sweeping up the mossy 
Lawns, impoverished by great trees, 
And the conservatory's tomato-plants 
And all my idle and infertile days: 

And you to whom I remain an evil enigma 
Remember pleasantly the white of birds 
Against the old quad's green, remember 
How friendship for us was not upon the cards. 

Remember your old coats, your golf umbrella, 
Your loud laughter, growth of thought and taste: 
And me, in whom your sweet civility 
Found only barren soil, a churlish waste. 

lady, had I speech as I have words 
And had I love as I have images . . . 
Think of me silent, awkward, blind, 
And wait until the world is at my knees. 

1 may be pleasant then! Poor egoist 

With this one gift, and could but be at ease 

With you, who might have saved me from my poetry, 

Who offered life, instead of lonely days. 



60 



G. S. PHASER 

LEAN STREET 

Here, where the baby paddles in the gutter, 

Here, in the slaty greyness and the gas, 

Here, where the women wear dark shawls and mutter 

A hasty word as other women pass, 

Telling the secret, telling, clucking and tutting, 
Sighing, or saying that it served her right, 
The bitch! the words and weather both are cutting 
In Causewayend, on this November night. 

At pavement's end and in the slaty weather 
I stare with glazing eyes at meagre stone, 
Rain and the gas are sputtering together 
A dreary tune. O leave my heart alone, 

O leave my heart alone, I tell my sorrows, 

For I will soothe you in a softer bed 

And I will numb your grief with fat to-morrows 

Who break your milk teeth on this stony bread! x 

They do not hear. Thought stings me like an adder, 
A doorway's sagging plumb-line squints at me, 
The fat sky gurgles like a swollen bladder 
With the foul rain that rains on poverty. 

ON A MEMORY OF BEAUTY 

How can the heart for sea and stone 
Be cumbered, and forget a face 
That moved it once to fret and moan- 
Forget the woman, see the place? 

61 



G. S. FRASER 

But was it one or was it two, 
Was it a statue or a girl? 
Might every spring her form renew 
And the white sea-froth be her curl? 

Beauty but for a moment shone, 
The likeness of a cloud or wave 
Whose momentary aspect, gone, 
The sieve of memory cannot save. 

Right at the back of my head, I know, 
Incredible, wild things 
Struggle like swans half-blind with snow- 
And the dying swan sings. 



S. S. CITY OF BENARES 

The bell that tolls my syllables can tell 

An underwater tale, clang how there fell 

Suddenly out of a surface shouting world 

Into dumb calm doomed children, and there curled 

(Currents' sick fingers whispering at their hair) 

Round them a coiling clutch, was our despair. 

Sea's soft sad pressure, like the sprawl of love, 

Darkly spreadeagled, so they could not move, 

The wide wet mouth was heavy, they would choke, 

Till in that cold confusion pity spoke: 

"This is a nightmare and one is asleep. 

This is a dream, my brave one, do not weep; 

Often may drown in dreams and not be dead: 

Such weight is mother leaning on your bed." 

62 



G. S. FRASER 

But having thought of this to cheat my pain, 

That woe and wonder harrows me again, 

Fat clouds seem bulked like whales, while through the green 

Grave tons of twilight, in a submarine 

Solidity of air like sea I move, 

Pressure of horror how our hate hurts love. 

Deeper than grief can plummet, mercy lies, 

But not so deep as trust in children's eyes, 

Justice is high in heaven, but more high 

Blood of the innocent shall smear the sky 

Or think that red the flame of seraph wings, 

See stained-glass heaven, where each darling sings 

In God's dark luminous world of green and gold 

As lovely as death's waters, but less cold: 

Think what you will, but like the crisping leaf 

In whipped October, crack your thoughts to grief. 

In the drenched valley, whimpering and cold, 

The small ghosts flicker, whisper, unconsoled. 



Roy Fuller 

WINTER NIGHT 

An owl is hooting in the grove, 

The moonlight makes the night air mauve, 

The trees are regular as crystals, 

The thawing road shines black as pistols, 

And muffled by the quiet snow 

The wind is only felt to blow. 

Dread bird that punctually calls! 

Its sound inhuman strangely falls 

63 



ROY PULLER 

Within the human scale; and I 

Am forced to place, besides the cry, 

The moon, the trees, the swollen snow, 

Reluctantly with what I know. 

Even the road conveys the sense 

Of being outside experience; 

As though, this winter night of war, 

The world men made were man's no more. 

THE GIRAFFES 

I think before they saw me the giraffes 

Were watching me. Over the golden grass, 

The bush and ragged open tree of thorn, 

From a grotesque height, under their lightish horns, 

Their eyes fixed on mine as I approached them. 

The hills behind descended steeply: iron 

Coloured outcroppings of rock half covered by 

Dull green and sepia vegetation, dry 

And sunlit: and above, the piercing blue 

Where clouds like islands lay or like swans flew. 

Seen from those hills the scrubby plain is like 
A large-scale map whose features have a look 
Half menacing, half familiar, and across 
Its brightness arms of shadow ceaselessly 
Revolve. Like small forked twigs or insects move 
Giraffes, upon the great map where they live. 

When I went nearer, their long bovine tails 
Flicked loosely, and deliberately they turned, 
An undulation of dappled grey and brown, 

64 



ROY FULLER 

And stood in profile with those curious planes 
Of neck and sloping haunches. Just as when 
Quite motionless they watched I never thought 
Them moved by fear, a desire to be a tree, 
So as they put more ground between us I 
Saw evidence that there were animals with 
Perhaps no wish for intercourse, or no 
Capacity. 

Above the falling sun 

Like visible winds the clouds are streaked and spun, 
And cold and dark now bring the image of 
Those creatures walking without pain or love. 

NATIVE WORKING ON THE AERODROME 

Curls powdered with chalk like a black roman bust, 
This prisoner, convicted of a lust 
For maize, is whipped to building a great shed 
For bombers; and bears the earth upon his head. 

LETTER TO MY WIFE 

The loud mechanical voices of the sirens 
Lure me from sleep and on the heath, like stars, 
Moths fall into a mounting shaft of light. 
Airplanes whirr over and then the night stays quiet; 
The moon is peeled of cloud, its gold is changed 
On stone for silver and the cap of sky 
Glitters like quartz, impersonal and remote. 
This surface is the same, the clock's bland face, 
Its smiling moustaches, hide the spring, knotted 
Like muscles, and the crouching jungle hammer. 

65 



ROY FULLER 

The same but so different with you not here. 

This evening when I turned from the clothes you left, 

Empty and silk, the souls of swallows flickered 

Against the glass of our house: I felt no better 

Along the tree massed alleys where I saw 

The long pale legs on benches in the dark. 

It was no vague nostalgia which I breathed 

Between the purple colloids of the air: 

My lust was as precise and fierce as that of 

The wedge-headed jaguar or the travelling Flaubert. 

But I only encountered the ghosts of the suburb, 

Those ghosts you know and who are real and walk 

And talk in the small public gardens, by the tawdry 

Local monuments; the Witch and Big Head 

And the others, fleeting and familiar as 

Our memories and ambitions, and just as dead. 

Being alone they stopped me; Big Head first. 

Removing her unbelievable hat, she showed me 

What before I had only conjectured, and she whispered: 

lucky you you might have been born like this. 

1 knew it was true, but, hurrying on, the Witch 
Lifted her cane and barred the way; she is 
Lean and very dirty but hanging round 

That skeleton are rags of flesh still handsome. 

Moving her lips madly and in a foreign tone she said: 

Oh do not hope, boy you will come to this. 

I ran, being certain that she had not erred, 

Back to our room where now the only noise 

Is the icy modulated voice of Mozart 

And the false clock ticking on the mantelpiece. 

66 



ROY FULLER 

Now in the bubble of London whose glass will soon 

Smear into death, at the still calm hour of four, 

I see the shadows of our life, the Fates 

We narrowly missed, our possible destiny. 

I try to say that love is more solid than 

Our bodies, but I only want you here. 

I know they created love and that the rest 

Is ghosts: war murders love I really say. 

But dare I write it to you who have said it 

Always and have no consolation from the ghosts? 



EPITAPH ON A BOMBING VICTIM 

Reader, could his limbs be found 
Here would lie a common man: 
History inflicts no wound 
But explodes what it began. 
And with its enormous lust 
For division splits the dust. 
Do not ask his nation; that 
Was History's confederate. 



GOOD-BYE FOR A LONG TIME 

A furnished room beyond the stinging of 
The sea, reached by a gravel road in which 
Puddles of rain stare up with clouded eyes: 

The photographs of other lives than ours ; 
The scattered evidence of your so brief 
Possession, daffodils fading in a vase. 

67 



ROY FULLER 

Our kisses here as they have always been, 

Half sensual, half sacred, bringing like 

A scent our years together, crowds of ghosts. 

And then among the thousand thoughts of parting 
The kisses grow perfunctory; the years 
Are waved away by your retreating arm. 

And now I am alone. I am once more 
The far-off boy without a memory, 
Wandering with an empty deadened self. 

Suddenly under my feet there is the small 
Body of a bird, startling against the gravel. 
I see its tight shut eye, a trace of moisture. 

And ruffling its gentle breast the wind, its beak 
Sharpened by death: and I am yours again, 
Hurt beyond hurting, never to forget. 

THE END OF A LEAVE 

Out of the damp black night, 
The noise of locomotives, 
A thousand whispering, 
Sharp-nailed, sinewed, slight, 
I meet that alien thing 
Your hand, with all its motives. 

Far from the roof of night 
And iron these encounter; 
In the gigantic hall 

68 



ROY FULLER 

As the severing light 

Menaces, human, small, 

These hands exchange their counters. 

Suddenly our relation 
Is terrifyingly simple 
Against wretched times, 
Like a hand which mimes 
Love in this anguished station 
Against a whole world's pull. 

POEM 

Pity, repulsion, love and anger, 
The vivid allegorical 
Reality of gun and hangar, 
Sense of the planet's imminent fall : 

Our fathers felt these things before 
In another half-forgotten war. 

And our emotions are caught part 
From them; their weaponed world it is 
They should have left to the abyss 
Or made it an image of their heart. 

SPRING 1942 

Once as we were sitting by 
The falling sun, the thickening air, 
The chaplain came against the sky 
And quietly took a vacant chair. 

69 



ROY FULLER 

And under the tobacco smoke: 

"Freedom," he said, and "Good" and "Duty." 

We stared as though a savage spoke. 

The scene took on a singular beauty. 

And we made no reply to that 
Obscure, remote communication, 
But only stared at where the flat 
Meadow dissolved in vegetation. 

And thought: O sick, insatiable 

And constant lust; O death, our future; 

O revolution in the whole 

Of human use of man and nature! " 

CRUSTACEANS 

Upon the beach are thousands of crabs; they are 

Small, with one foreclaw curiously developed. 

Against the ashen sand I see a forest 

Of waving, pink, in some way human, claws. 

The crabs advance or, perhaps, retreat a step 

And then like Hamlet's father slowly beckon 

With that flesh-coloured, yes, obscene, incisor. 

These actions in the mass take on a rhythm 

The sexual display of animals, 

The dance of the tribe, or the enthusiasm 

Of a meeting. 

If you go closer to the crabs 

You see that with their normal claws they are making 
Spheres from the sand, small perfect rounds, which they, 
After a little preliminary twiddling, 

70 



ROY FULLER 

Produce from beneath their bodies suddenly, 
Like jugglers, and deposit by their holes. 
While this goes on, that monstrous foreclaw, that 
Button hole, is motionless. And all around 
The shafts sunk by these creatures lie the eggs 
Of sand, so patiently, endlessly evolved. 

At last I stretch and wave my hand: the crabs 
Instantly bolt down their holes and pull a sphere, 
A trap door, after them, and in a second 
The beach is still. 

While I was watching them 
My eyes unfocused with the effort, or 
Maybe it was the whole activity 
Which like an idea detached itself from its 
Frame, background: and I thought, are these that I 
Regard with such pity, disgust, absorption, crabs? 



Wrey Gardiner 

WALKING IN LONDON 

Walking between the ruined walls 
Where the stone falls and the dust blows 
With the wind from the black desert 
Of mankind we do not see 
Or do not want to see 

I drift with a brown leaf 

Whirled by the unseen storm about me, 

71 



WREY GARDINER 

Leaf in a green world that falls 

Long before autumn because the time 

Is a dry season of withered hearts 

Without love, without the beating and ecstatic rain. 

And in my pockets are poems rustling 

Like the solitary dry leaf, and a little sand 

From last year's beaches, and my eyes 

See the images of the real and the unreal city 

Floating over the river, remembered 

Like the picture we cannot forget 

Of the haughty sneering cavalier, 

Or the outstretched arms of the crucified man. 



OUR TRUE BEGINNINGS 

Time breaks our passion but the Virgin smiles 
Her hands are clasped in the blue mantle of heaven 
And the sea, her haven, is flecked with the white of love 
Falling like the reflection of walls in the even water. 

For humanity that hears the drum must come to love, 
Light leaves in the rain, the memory of night 
Coming suddenly over the sea darkening the evil 
Of a sad day remembering the lonely evening. 

The rails rusted by the deserted quayside, 

The ships abandoned to the stone white gulls. 

Only in the cold of the solitary hour 

We find the crabbed certainty of our true beginnings. 



WREY GARDINER 

POETRY IS HAPPINESS 

Poetry is happiness; and happiness is the shadow of poetry 
Like the shape of Orion in the midnight sky 
Spread across the darkening and dreadful future, 
A cold icicle pure as our merciless nature. 

I am the idiot lost on a winter's morning 
Bedevilled by despair of the ancient works of man, 
Ink on my fingers and murder in my heart, 
Lonely as angels or the ghost of time. 

Love is my happiness and love my learning, 

Words are my undiluted wisdom, not hard my meaning, 

Clear as the unseen blackbird singing alone. 

Poetry is life and life lies lazy in the sun. 

DR. COPPELIUS 

Water-still is the shade of old Coppelius, 
Winding his toys alone in the empty room 
So soon to be filled with the poetry of light 
And white limbs listening at the enigmatic door. 

Water-silk are the dreams of old Coppelius, 

Lost in the attics of all the forgotten towns 

Of time, hazy with light of another century, 

Only the music now will bring out of the memory. 

Days are now dark and dreams are of the dying; 
No magic skill is lavished on the doll 
With the bright staring eyes and steps like light 
Shimmering on the quiet floor of our private world. 

73 



Robert Garioch 

GHAISTIES 

Cauld are the ghaisties in yon kirk yaird 

an' cauld the airms 
that they mell wi' the mists o' the timni 

breists o' their loves; 
at the heid o' their bed cauld angels staund on guaird, 

an' marble doves. 
They ken na' the fear o' Code, as they sleep ayont sin, 

nor the terror o' man 
an' there's nane but the angels tae glunch 

at their trueloves' chairms, 
yet they lang for the reek o' the 

creeshy swat frae the skin, 
an' the grup o' a huun'. 
But we in the warld are alowe 
wi' the glawmer o' bluid-reid flame 
that loups ti the bluid in your tongue's tip 

as it tingles on mine, 
an' the howe 

o' the back we loo wi' oor finger-tips, an' the wame, 
brent-white, wi' a flush aneath 
like cramosie wine, 
hoo it curves ti meet ma ain! 

O ma sonsie frow 
what though the flesh be bruckle, 

an' fiends be slee, 

the joys o' the solid earth we'll pree or they dwine, 
we'll lauch at daith, an' man, an* the fiend, aw three, 
afore we dee. 

(See page 312 for glossary for this poem.) 
74 



David Gascoyne 



THE GRAVEL-PIT FIELD 

Beside the stolid opaque flow 

Of rain-gorged Thames; beneath a thin 

Layer of early-evening light 

Which seems to drift, a ragged veil, 

Upon die chilly March air's tide: 

Upwards in shallow shapeless tiers 

A stretch of scurfy pock-marked waste 

Sprawls laggardly its acres till 

They touch a raw brick-villa' d rim. 

Amidst this nondescript terrain 
Haphazardly the gravel-pits' 
Rough-hewn rust-coloured hollows yawn, 
Their steep declivities away 
From the field-surface dropping down 
Towards the depths below where rain- 
Water in turbid pools stagnates 
Like scraps of sky decaying in 
The sockets of a dead man's stare. 

The shabby coat of coarse grass spread 

Unevenly across the ruts 

And humps of lumpy soil; the bits 

Of stick and threads of straw; loose clumps 

Of weeds with withered stalks and black 

Tatters of leaf and scorched pods : all 

These intertwined minutiae 



75 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

Of Nature's humblest growths persist 
In their endurance here like rock. 

As with untold intensity 

On the far edge of Being, where 

Life's last faint forms begin to lose 

Name and identity and fade 

Away into the void, endures 

The final thin triumphant flame 

Of all that's most despoiled and bare: 

So these last stones, in the extreme 

Of their abasement might appear, 

Like ( rare stones such as could have formed 

A necklet worn by the dead queen 

Of a great Pharaoh, in her tomb . . . 

So each abandoned snail-shell strewn 

Among these blotched dock-leaves might seem 

In the pure ray shed by the loss 

Of all man-measured value, like 

Some priceless pearl-enamelled toy 

Cushioned on green silk under glass. 

And who in solitude like this 
Can say the unclean mongrel's bones 
Which stick out, splintered, through the loose 
Side of a gravel-pit, are not 
The precious relics of some saint, 
Perhaps miraculous? Or that 
The lettering on this Woodbine- 
Packet's remains ought not to read: 
Mene mene tekel upharsin? 

76 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

Now a breeze gently breathes across 

The wildernesses cryptic face; 

The meagre grasses scarcely stir; 

But when some stranger gust sweeps past, 

Seeming as though an unseen swarm 

Of sea-birds had disturbed the air 

With their strong wings' wide stroke, a gleam 

Of freshness hovers everywhere 

About the field; and tall weeds shake, 

Leaves wave their tiny flags, to show 

That the wind blown about the brow 

Of this poor plot is nothing less 

Than the great constant draught the speed 

Of Earth's gyrations makes in Space . . . 

As I stand musing, overhead 

The Zenith's stark light thrusts a ray 

Down through dusk's rolling vapours, casts 

A last lucidity of day 

Across the scene: And in a flash 
Of insight I behold the field's 
Apotheosis : No-man's-land 
Between this world and the beyond, 
Remote from men and yet more real 
Than any human dwelling-place: 
A tabernacle where one stands 
As though within the empty space 
Round which revolves the Sages' Wheel. 

Spring 1941. 



77 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

ECCE HOMO 

Whose is this horrifying face, 
This putrid flesh, discoloured, flayed, 
Fed on by flies, scorched by the sun? 
Whose are these holllow red-filmed eyes 
And thorn-spiked head and spear-stuck side? 
Behold the Man: He is Man's Son. 

Forget the legend, tear the decent veil 
That cowardice or interest devised 
To make their mortal enemy a friend, 
To hide the bitter truth all His wounds tell, 
Lest the great scandal be no more disguised: 
He is in agony till the world's end, 

And we must never sleep during that time! 
He is suspended on the cross-tree now 
And we are onlookers at the crime, 
Callous contemporaries of the slow 
Torture of God. Here is the hill 
Made ghastly by His spattered blood. 

Whereon He hangs and suffers still: 

See, the centurions wear riding-boots, 

Black shirts and badges and peaked caps, 

Greet one another with raised-arm salutes; 

They have cold eyes, unsmiling lips; 

Yet these His brothers know not what they do. 

And on his either side hang dead 
A labourer and a factory hand, 

78 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

Or one is maybe a lynched Jew 
And one a Negro or a Red, 
Coolie or Ethiopian, Irishman, 
Spaniard or German democrat. 

Behind His lolling head the sky 

Glares like a fiery cataract 

Red with the murders of two thousand years 

Committed in His name and by 

Crusaders, Christian warriors 

Defending faith and property. 

Amid the plain beneath His transfixed hands, 

Exuding darkness as indelible 

As guilty stains, fanned by funereal 

And lurid airs, besieged by drifting sands 

And clefted landslides our about-to-be 

Bombed and abandoned cities stand. 

He who wept for Jerusalem 
Now sees His prophecy extend 
Across the greatest cities of the world, 
A guilty panic reason cannot stem 
Rising to raze them all as He foretold; 
And He must watch this drama to the end. 

Though often named, He is unknown 

To the dark kingdoms at His feet 

Where everything disparages His words, 

And each man bears the common guilt alone 

And goes blindfolded to his fate, 

And fear and greed are sovereign lords. 

79 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

The turning point of history 

Must come. Yet the complacent and the proud 

And who exploit and kill, may be denied 

Christ of Revolution and of Poetry 

The resurrection and the life 

Wrought by your spirit's blood. 

Involved in their own sophistry 

The black priest and the upright man 

Faced by subversive truth shall be struck dumb, 

Christ of Revolution and of Poetry, 

While the rejected and condemned become 

Agents of the divine. 

'Not from a monstrance silver- wrought 

But from the tree of human pain 

Redeem our sterile misery, 

Christ of Revolution and of Poetry, 

That man's long journey through the night 

May not have been in vain. 

MISERERE 

Le desespok a des ailes 
L'amour a pour aile nacre 
Le dsespoir 
Les societes pcuvcnt changer. 

PIERRE JEAN JOUVE 
Tetiebrae 

"It is finished." The last nail 

Has consummated the inhuman pattern, and the veil 

Is torn. God's wounds are numbered. 

80 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

All is now withdrawn: void yawns 
The rock-hewn tomb. There is no more 
Regeneration in the stricken sun, 
The hope of faith no more, 
No height no depth no sign 
And no more history. 

This may it be: and worse. 

And may we know Thy perfect darkness. 

And may we into Hell descend with Thee. 

Pieta 

Stark in the pasture on the skull-shaped hill, 
In swollen aura of disaster shrunken and 
Unsheltered by the ruin of the sky, 
Intensely concentrated in themselves the banded 
Saints abandoned kneel. 

And under the unburdened tree 

Great in their midst, the rigid folds 

Of a blue cloak upholding as a text 

Her grief-scrawled face for the ensuing world to read, 

The Mother, whose dead Son's dear head 

Weighs like a precious blood-incrusted stone 

On her unfathomable breast: 

Holds Him God has forsaken, Word made flesh 
Made ransom, to the slow smoulder of her heart 
Till the catharsis of the race shall be complete. 



81 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

De Profundis 

Out of these depths: 

Where footsteps wander in the marsh of death and an 
Intense infernal glare is on our faces facing down: 

Out of these depths, what shamefaced cry 

Half choked in the dry throat, as though a stone 

Were our confounded tongue, can ever rise: 

Because the mind has been struck blind 

And may no more conceive 

Thy Throne . . . 

Because the depths 
Are clear with only death's 
Marsh-light, because the rock of grief 
Is clearly too extreme for us to breach: 
Deepen our depths, 

And aid our unbelief. 

Kyrie 

Is man's destructive lust insatiable? There is 
Grief in the blow that shatters the innocent face. 
Pain blots out clearer sense. And pleasure suffers 
The trial thrust of death in even the bride's embrace. 

The black catastrophe that can lay waste our worlds 
May be unconsciously desired. Fear masks our face; 
And tears as warm and cruelly wrung as blood 
Are tumbling even in the mouth of our grimace. 

82 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

How can our hope ring true? Fatality of guilt 
And complicated anguish confounds rime and place; 
While from the tottering ancestral house an angry voice 
Resounds in prophecy. Grant us extraordinary grace, 

O spirit hidden in the dark in us and deep, 
And bring to light the dream out of our sleep. 

Lachrytnae 

Slow are the years of light: 

and more immense 

Than the imagination. And the years return 
Until the Unity is filled. And heavy are 
The lengths of Time with the slow weight of tears. 
Since Thou didst weep, on a remote hill-side 
Beneath the olive-trees, fires of unnumbered stars 
Have burnt the years away, until we see them now: 
Since Thou didst weep, as many tears 
Have flowed like hourglass sand. 
Thy tears were all. 
And when our secret face 
Is blind because of the mysterious 
Surging of tears wrung by our most profound 
Presentiment of evil in man's fate, our cruellest wounds 
Become Thy stigmata. They are Thy tears which fall. 

Ex Nilrilo 

Here am I now cast down 
Beneath the black glare of a netherworld's 
Dead suns, dust in my mouth, among 
Dun tiers no tears refresh: am cast 
Down by a lofty hand, 

83 



DAVID GASCOYNE 

Hand that I love! Lord Light, 
How dark is thy arm's will and ironlike 
Thy ruler's finger that has sent me here! 
Far from Thy face I nothing understand, 
But kiss the Hand that has consigned 

Me to these latter years where I must learn 
The revelation of despair, and find 
Among the debris of all certainties 
The hardest stone on which to found 
Altar and shelter for Eternity. 

Sanctus 

Incomprehensible 

O Master fate and mystery 

And message and long promised 

Revelation! Murmur of the leaves 

Of life's prolific tree in the dark haze 

Of midsummer: and inspiration of the blood 

In the ecstatic secret bed: and bare 

Inscription on a prison wall, "For thou shalt persevere 

In thine identity...": a momentary glimpsed 

Escape into the golden dance of dust 

Beyond the window. These are all. 

Uncomprehending. But to understand 

Is to endure, withstand the withering blight 

Of winter night's long desperation, war, 

Confusion, till at the dense core 

Of this existence all the spirit's force 

Becomes acceptance of blind eyes 

To see no more. Then they may see at last; 

And all they see their vision sanctifies. 



W. S. Graham 



GIGHA 



That firewood pale with salt and burning green 
Outfloats its men who waved with a sound of drowning 
Their saltcut hands over mazes of this rough bay. 
Quietly this morning beside the subsided herds 
Of water I walk. The children wade the shallows. 
The sun with long legs wades into the sea. 

NIGHT'S FALL 

Night's fall unlocks the dirge of the sea 
To pour up from the shore and befriending 
Gestures of water waving, to find me 
Dressed warm in a coat of land in a house 
Held off the drowned by my blood's race 
Over the crops of my step to meet some praise. 

The surge by day by night turns lament 
And by this night falls round the surrounding 
Seaside and countryside and I can't 
Sleep one word away on my own for that 
Grief sea with a purse of pearls and debt 
Wading the land away with salt in his throat. 

By this loud night traded into evidence 

Of a dark church of voices at hand 

I lie, work of the gruff sea's innocence 

And lie, work of the deaths I find 

On the robbed land breathing air and 

The friendly thief sea wealthy with the drowned. 

85 



W. S. GRAHAM 

DEFINITION OF MY BROTHER 

Each other we meet but live grief rises early 

By far the ghost and surest of all the sea 

Making doorway to within me. My bowed-down holy 

Man of the watchman minute begs that reply, 

Your voice or mine. 

One another I leave into Eden with. I commit 

The grave. Poverty takes over where we two meet. 

Time talks over the fair boy. His hot heartbeat 

Beats joy back over the knellringing till defeat. 

It's a contrary son I'm of. My wave-felled kin 
Steal out on the worlding waters far back again 
Away to the whirling beaches to reach his alone 
Lost eyes and sprinkled miracles of destruction. 
Beggar to shine 

In once the whales way wearing the starboard freights, 
I promise I'll ship the mad nights to bright benefits 
To that seastrolling voice in waves and states 
Not mine but what one another contrary creates. 

Or do we know a prince bleeding more gently 
Away to best the morning at its gates? 

POEM 

O gentle queen of the afternoon 
Wave the last orient of tears. 
No daylight comet ever breaks 
On so sweet an archipelago 
As love on love. 

86 



W. S. GRAHAM 

The fundamental negress bnilt 
In a cloudy descant of the stars 
Surveys no sorrow, invents no limits 
Till laughter the watcher of accident 
Sways off to God. 

O gentle queen of the afternoon 
The dawn is rescued dead and risen. 
Promise, O bush of blushing joy, 
No daylight comet ever breaks 
On so sweet an archipelago 
As love on love. 



John Heath-Stubbs 

BEGGAR'S SERENADE 

I'm a peevish old man with a penny-whistle 
Blowing under your window this blessed evening 
But pause a moment and hear the tune I'm playing 

I never was handsome and my limbs aren't straight 
But I raise my finger and the girls all follow me 
And leave some of the spruce young fellows gaping 

I had a painted girl whom none spoke well of 

And I had a milkmaid who didn't know cow from bull 

And a girl with green flesh out of a lucky hill 

And I had a lady as fine and as proud as you 
To follow me forty leagues and bed under a bush 
And I left her weeping at the long lane's end 

And are you sure where you will lie to-night, woman? 

8? 



JOHN HEATH-STUBBS 

THE GHOST IN THE CELLARAGE 

Climb then by spiral stairways of cold thought 
Into the singing darkness you shall find 
God's healing hands are numb-transfixed 
By sharp star-splinters to the cruel sky, 
And impotent, extended through the night. 

O rebel brain, burn through the too-tight skull 
Or turn me loose to graze -but then the needle 
Pierces more sharply to the unpurged organ; 
Flesh is betrayed by flesh, and Love unkindly 
Linked to a symmetry of skin and sinew. 
No delicate dial is the blood-pump heart, 
And all uncircumcised the tender eye-ball. 

O you who have found out your love's anatomy 
A painful dryness, think of a wounded mole 
Working in the earth, 
And the poor ghost under the castle pavement. 

TWO MEN IN ARMOUR 

Stark by the Eastern gate 
Stand the two iron men 
Full-throated singing 

As when before-dawn darkness 

Lolls on the Earth, the impossible season 

Of flesh subsided or nerves drawn tighter, 

The fire-hackled, blood-wattled, needle-spurred cock 

Stretches his wings through the blackness, proclaims, 

88 



JOHN HEATH-STUBBS 

The iron hand is on your shoulder 
The iron hand is on your head 

When pickpocket water strips the flesh 
Green-fingered, lurching the drowned limbs, choking 
The pale throat, drums on the bursting eyes; 
And rolls and rolls where monstrous things go by, 
All selfhood murdered, twitched beneath that tide 

(The iron hand is in your hand) 

When fire filches the proud heart from you, faggoting 

Your bones for kindling oh my Prince 

Let music go up then, let praise go up 

Like shepherds' fluting on the lonely hills. 

Till Love construe the cryptic iron faces. 



VIRGIN AND UNICORN 

Oh that bright impossible beast of the mind 
He was as wild as the wind, and his own pride 
Had turned him savage, 
And solitary in his solitary forest; 

But my eyes were mirrors and my lap spices, 

And he bowed his gold head down, gentle as cornstalks 

Under the wind, under the reaping sickle; 

And when they wrenched the horn from his splintering skull 
He was as full of tears and trust as a child. 



J. F. Hendry 



INVERBERG 

Sliced with shade and scarred with snow 

A mountain breaks like Mosaic rock 

And through the lilt of mist there flow 

Restless rivers of pebble, pocked 

And speckled, where moss and the centuries grow. 

Tree, married to cloud as stem is to feather, 
Branches and straddles the convex of sky, 
Death is aflame in the bracken where heather 
Rears semaphore smoke into high 
Blue messenger fire through soundless weather. 

Below, like bees, the ivies swarm, 
Cast in leaping veins, their trunk, a crippled 
Animal of thighs pounced from loch-water, storms 
The slated shores of the past into ripples 
Interpreting man's fretted cuneiform. 

TIR-NAN-OG 

A man is born, a man dies, 
And in between are miseries. 

In between he is alive 

But cannot be allowed to live 

Since, body's hunger never fed. 
The mind is never satisfied 

90 



J. F. HENDRY 

And hands and feet and head and eyes 
Are hourly humbled to the knees. 

A man dies, a man is born, 
And in between a burden borne. 

In between, by force of love 
A grief in life is made alive 

Whose mind is more than satisfied 
And body's hunger always fed, 

Whose hands rise up from feet and knees, 
Encircle head and rub the eyes. 



THE SHIP 

Here is a ship you made 
Out of my breast and sides 
As I lay dead in the yards 
Under the hammers. 

Here is the hull you built 
Out of a heart of salt, 
Sky-rent, the prey of birds 
Strung on the longshore. 

Here is her rigging bound 
Nerve, sinew, ice and wind 
Blowing through the night 
The starred dew of beads. 

91 



J. F. HENDRY 

Here her ribs of silver 
Once steerless in a culvert 
Climb the laddered centuries 
To hide a cloud in a frame. 

THE CONSTANT NORTH 
(For Dee) 

Encompass me, my lover, 

With your eyes' wide calm. 

Though noonday shadows are assembling doom, 

The sun remains when I remember them; 

And death, if it should come, 

Must fall like quiet snow from such clear skies. 

Minutes we snatched from the unkind winds 
Are grown into daffodils by the sea's 
Edge, mocking its green miseries; 
Yet I seek you hourly still, over 
A new Atlantis loneliness, blind 
As a restless needle held by the constant north 
we always have in mind. 

ORPHEUS 

I shall always come to find you here, 
forever among the debris of winter. 

In this half-world, this cataract of water 
where the elements of vision are dissolved 



92 



J. F. HENDRY 

An ocean pours into the hold of summer, 
whose hopes, with ours, are ripped and shelved: 

Brown leaf, still branch, sere stick, 

the shore is strewn with the season's shipwreck, 

And landward through the rains, the sea 
unrolls a proud vast tragedy. 



Rayner Heppenstall 

CONSOLATION IN JULY 

Father, be praised for a white jasmine 

Thrown over a balcony of flaking iron. 

The odour faint, florets quickly discoloured, 

It roots in builder's rubble 

And the vile, sour clay of London, 

A soil for which none living feel affection, 

Rubbing it amorously between the fingers. 

A skein of brittle stalks, this dormant vine 

Yet expressed 

White, opaque flesh and the socketed pistil, 

The six joined petals and fivefold spears. 

Alas, they say 

The one inimitable perfume 

May now be feigned with bitter almonds, 

Tonquin beans, vanilla, that we need 

No longer travel to China in our dreams. 

And yet I feel with each new efflorescence 

My interest in earth is permanent, 

93 



RAYNER HEPPENSTALL 

A current lack of love 

Easily compensated in another life. 

Nudeleaf, yellow jasmine, 

Pale haunters of the winter, potted primula, 

Cold cyclamen, the yellow bush that Fortune 

Fetched from the heights of lost Yunnan, 

Fruitless cherry and the paeony's frilled drumsticks 

Promise, promise, when the year is early, 

And as the dog-day comes and the parched leaf 

Curls on the tree, with eight fingers 

Lupin promises (in the anxious palm 

A drop of dew like quicksilver). 

Promises a late wind, 

Tossing the ripe corn to the flying clouds, 

And last before there comes an aconite 

This ice-bound music crying to be loosed 

Promises. Promise all, beyond performance 

Unless it be, O Father, by your leave. 

SPRING SONG 

I have renounced already that hope. I renounce the 

sudden Whole, 
And I will not hope any longer to live my days in the 

clothedness of a vision 
Accidents of the numerous daytime so hate. Yet no 

days live if still, as I say, 
Timelessly long, still in the same thought, no more 

untied from Time, 
Abroad on the red-bellied bowl of oil, I figure the string 

of the small flame 
Of any dark chapel, staring aloft at an image painted 

last year. 

94 



RAYNER HEPPENSTALL 

I will have patience. Above all things I will be patient. 

I knelt last year 
With John of Ruysbroeck. And he showed me how it 

is possible for the small flame 
Of the soul to be blown into a conflagration that laps 

God round whole, 
How the spirit will bound up like an arrow, like the 

strenuous lark. Only my vision 
Is not his. If I stole the ciborium of St. Catherine now 

and gave the hosts to the Jews as, they say, 
Once John of Leuwen, the Jews should prick them and 

they would not bleed, as they would still in John of 

Ruysbroeck' s time. 

No, I will walk abroad, suffer and comb the days. In 

this time, 
With bounding of sap, without shame, the natural world 

rides out on the peaks of the year, 
And in the warm nights the body cries for a lover. 

Now Body is flame, 
Not Spirit. No bounty of God, no supernatural Light, 

no breath of the Whole 
Can break through these domes of the hawthorn. If 

any man in this weather were to say 
Other than bridegroom's prayers, the sun would flow 

down out of Heaven and burn up his vision. 

Therefore, I say, 
Maximus of Tyre shall be my master. I will use images. 

I will say 
The beaten gold, ivory and silver content me, that 

plants and rivers, in Time, 

95 



RAYNER HEPPENSTALL 

Peaks and the mountain torrents name Him. The actual 

lineaments of the Whole 
Are not present. Yet I will take pleasure in a lyre, a 

little spear, the particular vision, 
A chair, a running-ground, the Lover used. I will hold 

up the particles of the year 
To catch the Light. I will watch the Most Ample's 

refraction flicker in the small flame. 

And, most of all, I will suffer all losses, take from the 

Jews a flame 
To leave all my soul a desert where all men may tread. 

I will make out of Time, 
Before any host lies steaming upon my tongue, all the days 

of the year 

A cataract of knowledges and pain. I will neither say 
Nor see, nor keep any sense from the knife, but at the 

last, without either names or vision, 
Stretch my hand out in the close room and feel the Whole. 

So I make satisfaction. Such is my satispassion. Towards 

my winter vision 
It shall be so. No days live otherwise. Men must ride 

out of Time 
Or get unbroken joys out of Time. There is no third 

thing No man will say, 
If it were not so, I would have found another use for the 

days of the year. 



96 



RAYNER HEPPENSTALL 

HAGIOGRAPH 

That he would never have any rest this side of his death, 

Wailing around the image, Pygmalion, 

The many-hearted, knew. For the joy to relish her with, 

Holy as good blue pigments, as lucid as holy things, 

Is mastered in one place only. That is what had made strange 

The saint Pygmalion, saint, beggar and thief. 

At the gates of cities, catching a dawn through the wild plains, 
Wailing around the image, Pygmalion 
Scattered out still his many hearts. He gathered a glance 
In the nerve as blue as contemplation, blue as the voice of a dove, 
That would shake loose more sacramental textures and savours 

than God ever gave, 
The saint Pygmalion, saint, beggar and thief. 

This, at the last, was he that baited the mountain gallows, 

Wailing around the image, Pygmalion, 

The many-hearted man. And whoever will run into follies 

As holy as the morning sea, as the landward flute, 

Must cry out for his intercession. He lives in the heaviest light, 

The saint Pygmalion, saint, beggar and thief. 



Nigel Heseltine 

from MICROCOSMOS 
I 

I enter and as I enter all is abandoned 
like the apple and like the apple 
in my hand yet naked 

97 



RAYNER HEPPENSTALL 

Peaks and the mountain torrents name Him. The actual 

lineaments of the Whole 
Are not present. Yet I will take pleasure in a lyre, a 

little spear, the particular vision, 
A chair, a running-ground, the Lover used. I will hold 

up the particles of the year 
To catch the Light. I will watch the Most Ample's 

refraction flicker in the small flame. 

And, most of all, I will suffer all losses, take from the 

Jews a flame 
To leave all my soul a desert where all men may tread. 

I will make out of Time, 
Before any host lies steaming upon my tongue, all the days 

of the year 

A cataract of knowledges and pain. I will neither say 
Nor see, nor keep any sense from the knife, but at the 

last, without either names or vision, 
Stretch my hand out in the close room and feel the Whole. 

So I make satisfaction. Such is my satispassion. Towards 

my winter vision 
It shall be so. No days live otherwise. Men must ride 

out of Time 
Or get unbroken joys out of Time. There is no third 

thing No man will say, 
If it were not so, I would have found another use for the 

days of the year. 



96 



RAYNER HEPPENSTALL 

HAGIOGRAPH 

That he would never have any rest this side of his death, 

Wailing around the image, Pygmalion, 

The many-hearted, knew. For the joy to relish her with, 

Holy as good blue pigments, as lucid as holy things, 

Is mastered in one place only. That is what had made strange 

The saint Pygmalion, saint, beggar and thief. 

At the gates of cities, catching a dawn through the wild plains, 
Wailing around the image, Pygmalion 
Scattered out still his many hearts. He gathered a glance 
In the nerve as blue as contemplation, blue as the voice of a dove, 
That would shake loose more sacramental textures and savours 

than God ever gave, 
The saint Pygmalion, saint, beggar and thief. 

This, at the last, was he that baited the mountain gallows, 

Wailing around the image, Pygmalion, 

The many-hearted man. And whoever will run into follies 

As holy as the morning sea, as the landward flute, 

Must cry out for his intercession. He lives in the heaviest light, 

The saint Pygmalion, saint, beggar and thief. 



Nigel Heseltine 

from MICROCOSMOS 
I 

I enter and as I enter all is abandoned 
like the apple and like the apple 
in my hand yet naked 

97 



NIGEL HESELTINE 

stand and the apple in my hand 
slanting on the desolate shore slanting 
on the desolate shore. O golden bright 
bright here bright O bright here 
the light passes in my skin 
my skin. 



My hand cannot smooth your sigh 
nor bind your tear, nor scraping mark 
your present grave: my hand and yours 
unyoked the day, unyoked our year, 
our golden eyes' enchanted sight, 
and grasping learned the lying frame. 
Your grave I know below the roots 
of turning pines, your rotted face 
I resurrect, your hand and mine 
one bone one flesh. 

7 

He compares his beloved to a snake, 

sees that the blossom falling on her head 

is snow; she is the calm eye 

looks and sees nothing, she 

The swift dove and melting meadow. 



I give you my hand 

I dare and I dare not 

say yes 

trembles my heart trembles 

see there it is there 

98 



NIGEL HESELTINE 

if I knew I were happy 
there lets go 
I dare and I dare . . . 
I give my hand. 

10 

Suck the bare sob out of the heart 
because the sobbing guts 
reach for a life of their own. 

16 

what, will he come for me 

tall and terrible, with silk hanging from his shoulders? 

what can I set against his smile? 

17 

The worm cries not against the storm 
the worm that tunnels in the storm 
the worm in collapsed ruins 
moves among the moss and grasses. 



20 
r 



mysteries: if a nymph naked and golden 

naked as a nymph gold as the skin 

of a magic woman, naked as she 

lies like a cloud in our dreams: 

She lying sighing and crying 

at the sky singing and crying 

Love love love love. 

25 

Going to sing about Emily 

now they put her in a grave, 

99 



NIGEL HESELTINE 

she was the buried one 
and she didnt die of love. 

Now who came to her window 
he never came back again, 
if she ever saw him, 
he looked in and he's gone. 

Her yellow box fits her 
like they never looked after her 
a blowing summer dress on her 
they never went after her. 

So we put her there neatly 
where the scutch grass is plentiful, 
and now they've done that for her 
That's all we can do for her. 

Going to forget about Emily 
Because we wont remember her, 
Bury her in summertime 
And forget her by winter. 

32 

There are figures like the dark figures 
dark three figures in black, they 
shadow her they shadow her live 
lithe back, soaring I 
my eye on her lithe 
live body in love I love her 
stretched skin and from her leg 
so longing I longing I loving 

100 



NIGEL HESELTINE 

mounting eye carried higher her 

leaning back tight breasts shallow 

breasts breathing I cannot touch cannot 

grasp cannot slide cannot hide 

in my eye cannot. Three figures 

dark figures cherish her shadow her 

leaning there, three dark they together, they. 

33 

In the winter when the wet lanes hissed and sucked, 

I walked and whistled and capered in the muck: 

I sang Deep River, and that night I would be dancing. 

When every path was streaming I splashed my feet 
about the floating twigs, and in me was a sweet 
girl's name: three weeks to that day 
I'd kissed her where we crouched on a dark stairway. 

In the dark woods when I 

had shot at quick pigeons against the green sky, 

I held her to me in a sweet embrace 

and kissed the bark of a tree where I pressed my face. 

35 

I was sat in the church of their Lord 

and they told me I was a slave, 

and a fat-bellied parson aloft 

said I'd a soul he could save; 

but I dreamed on a man like a lion 
come down from the sky in his glory 
of muscle and fire and iron, 
and I spat on their Lord's story. 

101 



NIGEL HESELTINE 
40 

Come near me, for the night 
brings some cold thing near me: 
I am your door, your hand. 
What if the boards'* voices 
come crying as we lay? Dear, 
I am your door, your hand. 



That autumn when the partridges called in the stubble 
I waded the wet beet to my knees and angrily fired 
at birds who had no part in my trouble, 
and blew them apart and walked all day till I was tired. 
Gnawing in me that drove my feet on, her face in every wall 
her walk upon the hill, her voice, her tall 
body below the trees. The hot September sun was like a prison 
binding me in parched heat where I trod up and down and 
never could reach the horizon 

43 

I walked the mountains 

lonely for you among the windy grasses, 

lay like an ear in the night 

searching for you in every whisper. 

46 

Sion the son of Evan sang 

like a blind harper in his forge: 

I dreaming of dragons in the sparks, 

sniff the sharp smoke, and sniff the weapons that hang 

long on the smoked walls where carters had drawn hearts. 

102 



NIGEL HESELTINI- 
56 

I am like bound because of Abraham's knife 
is the core of his heart: my angels are 
angels are wraiths are like gone like bound: 
how shall I cry when he so holds my life? 

57 

1 cannot dry my eyes when I think of the distant time 
The evening was green and transparent behind the cypress 

and pine, 

where the rooks flew home cawing and in every bush 
the blackbirds chaffered in their own darkness and would not 

hush 

till the night melted into the hills, and in the black space 
of the sky down twinkled the stars like a gentle loving face. 



Sean Jennett 

THE QUICK 
i 

The blossoms dropped before we really saw them, 

for we had been so occupied that year 

that only death could hold us. And the spring 

breathed out its heart in air and fell away 

back to the old eclectic earth, and seed 

swelled on the naked stalk. 

The cuckoo's throat grew harsh 

and singing birds forgot their fresh delight 

for languid, buxom summer. 



SEAN JENNETT 

And we ignored the change, 

even the alteration in ourselves, 

the bubbling race of blood, the singing heart, 

the reins that tlirust in season: 

all sounds and pulses smothered by the dread 

that built its image in the unknown shadow 

and saw in the flowering brake a hideous threat. 

The seasons now have taken other colours 
by which we know them and divide in sections 
that can be the more neatly understood 
the confused course, the wild scrawl of war. 
The spring is ominous we have seen it full 
of fear and hate and triumph. Summer 
dogs with danger every casual thought. 
Autumn swells the harvest of defeat. 
And winter is the ragged night of sleep 
split with fire and the anger of the guns; 
and webbed with our intention of revenge, 
accumulation of the means of death, 
and slow perfection of the secret plan. 



Another spring grows to its summer fusion 

and no eye watches how the small green nipple 

spreads into leaf. The time 

is only important for the way men use it, 

and how God turns his finger in the twig 

or pushes a bent knuckle through the soil 

is a detail we have lost the care for, 

or never known because the years repeat it, 

each with its separate tongue mouthing the same syllable. 

104 



SEAN JENNETT 

And yet, we must outlast the time, 

we have no choice but to be simple-minded 

who must resist the headline and the sponsored lie, 

for there is no escape from circumstance 

in this live world, important, quarrelling earth, 

this dwarf star seething at conception's centre, 

troublesome second of eternal time. 

3 

War is not a dream, 

a nightmare to be banished by the shock 

of water, or the shaking ot a shoulder. 

Starting, it will continue in its way 

though Christ's wounds gape 

and that cross rooting in the bloody earth 

grows to die gallows in the conquered city; 

and while we struggle now to integrate 

custom and usage and the rasp of need 

life stumbles from our shadow and is lost 

and we know how these years of war 

came empty-handed, wolfed, and went their way, 

and paid us only die sharp coins of pain, 

hate and despair, vengeance and revenge. 

The mutilation of the body rears 
no architecture for our peaceful days, 
nor can the broken or the severed arm 
maintain the state. Bitterness and despair, 
corroding the foundations of the mind, 
will war against us at the end of war 
and in the moment of our gaudy triumph 
ruin all our gain. 

105 



SEAN JENNETT 

4 < 

Christ taught it at the march of Zabulon, 

in Capaernaum, to the eager, thoughtless crowd; 

casting out evil spirits from the mad 

to drive the malice from the sane and wise: 

now in this later time of the tongueless word 

when war enmeshes the slow limbs of God, 

fight without bitterness, meet without despair 

the shock of death; with no hate take 

the double pressure on the delicate trigger. 

But that loud politician, ranting right 

look out for him, for he is totally blind 

among the one-eyed and the cataracts, 

arid his way leads to hell: 

not only now, 

but, as for our own fathers, after our time, 

when the child we have conceived in love 

shall grow to manhood in a world at war. 

AND THE DEAD 

I saw them coming in the eyeless day 
in that wan landscape of the undreaming dead, 
and they had come so far their bodies leaned 
like the thin bent-grass on the wind-lapped moor. 
No-one knew of their coming: only the heart 
had known, and the idle bones foreseen 
the hard bone's breaking: for it ends in this, 
the living bone is useless in the end. 

O who will shoot the murderer 
O who destroy the curse of death 

106 



SEAN JENNETT 

and throw the smoking gun away: 

for him the febrile battlefields shall flower 

and he shall walk enchanted with his breath. 

This one in Libya by the rats 
dispersed; this his companion, on the stock 
cut in his nick, cut for each silent corpse; 
this one in the Donetz, and this in France, 
and these who soiled the unforgiving sea: 
"blow out, you bugles, over the rich dead!" 
The earth is theirs for ever, arid the waters 
under are swung by their shadowy breath. 

Alive they cried out on the other's horror, 
charged with unreason of the lunatic 
their brother coward, enemy, and killer, 
and raper of the cloistered nun and girls 
fresh from school. And each to his own banner 
gathered from country and from town, and raised 
it up for God, and sang their fellowing songs: 
and ground the bayonet sharp and charged the gun. 

O who will shoot the ranting man 

O who destroy the evil glory 

and throw the smoking gun away: 

though he shall be betrayed and sold for gold 

yet he shall live in this or any story. 

The evil of that life they know no more 
that in their day enraged the shoot of blood 
or seared with fear: its residue is shame; 
and their hearts are too ashy now for anger. 

107 



SEAN JENNETT 

Against the liar and the inflaming word 

they lie protected by the traps of death 

who to this commonwealth at last attain 

from daylight dream and the wild rage of the world. 

So jowl by jowl the sunken veterans come 
to this equation: here they are all their own 
and like a swallow of material day 
have split the hiatus, escaped the pulse 
of time, its long frustration and its flare of fear : 
nor shall we understand, who suffer still 
the thrusting heart and binding ligament 
perfection in the final negative. 



Glyn J 



ones 



SONG 

I kept neat my virginity, 

No love gulled me to bed; 

I whistled up the mountain stones 

My unseen arms outspread 

Lustrous, the lord-star sprang to me, 

He was my son instead. 

I felt my woody hair pour out 
Like water from my head 
To see my nipples serpent-mouthed, 
My sucking star-child dead. 

Lambleddian. 

108 



GLYN JONES 

GOLD 

A midday half-moon slopes in heaven, tipped 
And empty, with her golden liquor spilt. 
She rolls transparent on the floor of heaven. 
She has splashed her wine of gold upon the broom 
And poured it over golden chain adrip 
With honey-drench, and emptied it between 
My hands where rests the gold-clot of my love's 
Fair head, her chainmail cap of golden curls. 

Penbyn Gnyr. 



NIGHT 

This shadow flesh of risen man 
Bears on my bones the blurt of pain, 
Budges the rock and walks the quays 
The choking bandog snaps his chain. 

Her upright body floats the tide, 
Fish-teeth pluck cheek-bones bare; 
Naked Mary's candled wave 
Blows in the harvest of her hair. 

Mark the scandal on the hill 
Before our feather-raided sea; 
Sway like a bell-tongue, hanging man, 
And fret your Judas-fruited tree. 

The angelled air, the sea is edged 
With fever where black Patmos lies; 

109 



GLYN JONES 

Beneath his island aching oak 
My thunder-hearted lover dies. 

Like grief the rowdy swans return, 
Rain has her earring on the thorn; 
With broken hands I roll my rock 
Back on the Pasc of this raw dawn. 



L/anon. 



Sidney Keyes 



THE SNOW 

They said, It will be like snow falling 
To-night a hollow wind beating the laurels, 
And in the morning quiet, the laurels quiet, 
The soft sky resting on the treetops and 
The earth not frying any more. 

I read it would be safe, like snow lying 
Locked in a secret promise with the ground. 
And the clear distances, the friendly hills 
Would whisper, It is easy, easy as sleep 
To the lost traveller frozen in the field. 

But now it's come, how different without 
Those reassuring voices. Now I face 
The bright white glare of January, naked 
Among the clashing laurels, while the earth 
Stumbles and cries like any lonely lover. 

no 



SIDNEY KEYES 

THE WILDERNESS 

The red rock wilderness 
Shall be my dwelling-place. 

Where the wind saws at the bluffs 
And the pebble falls like thunder 
I shall watch the clawed sun 
Tear the rocks asunder. 

The seven-branched cactus 
Will never sweat wine: 
My own bleeding feet 
Shall furnish the sign. 

The rock says "Endure," 

The wind says "Pursue." 

The sun says "I will suck your bones 

And afterwards bury you." 



Laurie Lee 

LARCH TREE 

Oh, larch tree with scarlet berries 

sharpen the morning slender sun 

sharpen the thin taste of September 

with your aroma of sweet wax and powder delicate. 

Fruit is falling in the valley 
breaking on the snouts of foxes 

in 



LAURIE LEE 

breaking on the wooden crosses 
where children bury the shattered bird. 

Fruit is falling in the city 

blowing a woman's eyes and fingers 

across the street among the bones 

of boys who could not speak their love. 

I watch a starling cut the sky 
a dagger through the blood of cold 
and grasses bound by strings of wind 
stockade the sobbing fruit among the bees. 

Oh, larch tree, with icy hair 
your needles thread the thoughts of snow 
while in the fields a shivering girl 
takes to her breast the sad ripe apples. 

JUNIPER 

Juniper holds to the moon 

a girl adoring a bracelet; 

as the hills draw up their knees 

they throw off their jasmine girdles. 

You are a forest of game, 
a thought of nights in procession, 
you tread through the bitter fires 
of the nasturtium. 

I decorate you to a smell of apples, 
I divide you among the voices 

112 



LAURIE LEE 

of owls and cavaliering cocks 

And woodpigeons monotonously dry. 

I hang lanterns on your mouth 

and candles from your passionate crucifix, 

and bloody leaves of the Virginia 

drip with their scarlet oil. 

There is a pike in the lake 

whose blue teeth eat the midnight stars 

piercing the water's velvet skin 

and puncturing your sleep. 

I am the pike in your breast, 
my eyes of clay revolve the waves 
while cirrus roots and lilies grow 
between our banks of steep embraces. 



Denise Levertov 

CHRISTMAS 1944 

Bright cards above the fire bring no friends near, 

fire cannot keep the cold from seeping in. 

Spindrift sparkle and candles on the tree 

make brave pretence of light; but look out of doors: 

Evening already surrounds the curtained house, 

draws near, watches; 

gardens are blue with frost, and every carol 

bears a burden of exile, a song of slaves. 

Come in, then, poverty, and come in, death: 



DENISE LEVERTOV 

this year too many, lie cold, or die in cold, 
for any small room's warmth to keep you out. 
You sit in empty chairs, gleam in unseeing eyes; 
having no home now, you cast your shadow 
over the atlas, and rest in restlessness 
of our long nights as we lie, dreaming of Europe. 

A painted bird or boat above the fire, 

a fire in the hearth, a candle in the dark, 

a dark excited tree, fresh from the forest, 

are all that stand between us and the wind. 

The wind has tales to tell of sea and city, 

a plague on many houses, fear knocking on the doors; 

how venom trickles from the mouth of death, 

arid trees are white with rage of alien battles. 

Who can be happy while the wind recounts 

its long sagas of sorrow? Though we are safe 

in a flickering circle of winter festival 

We dare not laugh; or if we laugh, we lie, 

hearing hatred crackle in the coal, 

the voice of treason, the voice of love. 

THE ANTEROOM 

Out of this anteroom whose light is broken 

by slatted blinds and rustling portieres, 

a tentative room too near the street, 

pierced with street voices and the sound of horns, 

uneasy halting place of travelling ghosts : 

out of this season of uprooted hours, 

where time, that should grow round as hanging fruit, 

rushes like showers of dry and shrivelled leaves, 

114 



DENISE LEVERTOV 

and no hour quickens into truth; where love, 
confused, can never touch or penetrate 
a growing dream, but hovers at its side: 

that love, that dream, must travel 

into wide landscapes where the heart has rest, 

and quietly (as stones, pure on the still earth, 

await a strange completion into dream, 

by the slow rain, or by a man's desire) 

await their transformation into life. 



FOLDING A SHIRT 

Folding a shirt, a woman stands 
still for a moment, to recall 
warmth of flesh ; her careful hands 

heavy on a sleeve, recall 

a gesture, or the touch of love; 

she leans against the kitchen wall, 

listening for a word of love, 
but only finds a sound like fear 
running through the rooms above. 

With folded clothes she folds her fear, 

but cannot put desire away, 

and cannot make the silence hear. 

Unwillingly she puts away 
the bread, the wine, the knife, 
smooths the bed where lovers lay, 

115 



DENISE LEVERTOV 

while timers unhesitating knife 
cuts away the living hours, 
the common rituals of life. 

THE BARRICADES 

If now you cannot hear me, it is because 
your thoughts are held by sounds of destiny 
or turn perhaps to darkness, magnetized, 
as a doomed ship upon the Manacles 
is drawn to end its wandering and down 
into the stillness under rock and wave 
to lower its bright figurehead; or else 
you never heard me, only listening 
to that implicit question in the shade, 
duplicity that knaws the roots of love. 

If now I cannot see you, or be sure 
you ever stirred beyond the walls of dream 
rising, unbroken battlements, to a sky 
heavy with constellations of desire, 
it is because those barricades are grown 
too tall to scale, too dense to penetrate, 
hiding the landscape of your distant life 
in which you move, as birds in evening air 
far beyond sight trouble the darkening sea 
with the low piping of their discontent. 

AUTUMN JOURNEY 

Out of autumn like a blade 

mysteriously engraved, flashes the frost; 

stars and leaves are blown to the brown earth, 

116 



DENISE LEVERTOV 

and burn distantly, 

encircle evening in a web of smoke. 

Now once again the wanderer deserts 
the comfortable myth and the drowsy mansion 
where all these months he lay entranced, and heard 
the soft forgetful murmur of his flowers, 
lovingly bent over their mirrored doubles. 

As he looks back, a window lit 

fantastic lemon fruit in the northern woods, 

lost in a high facade suggests 

a latent music, and he knows the sound 

is both "Farewell" and promises of treasure, 

over the hill, among the burning worlds. 

POEM 

Some are too much at home in the role of wanderer, 

watcher, listener; who, by lamplit doors 

that open only to another's knock, 

commune with shadows and are happier 

with ghosts than living guests in a warm house. 

They drift about the darkening city squares, 

coats blown in evening winds and fingers feeling 

familiar holes in pockets, thinking: Life 

has always been a counterfeit, a dream 

where dreaming figures danced .behind the glass. 

Yet as they work, or absently stand at a window 

letting a tap run and the plates lie wet, 

while the bright rain softly shines upon slates, 

they feel the whole of life is theirs, the music, 

colour, and warmth, and light; hands held 

JI7 



DEMISE LEVERTOV 

safe in the hands of love; and trees beside them 

dark and gentle, growing as they grow, 

a part of the world with fire and house and child. 

The undertone of all the solitude 

is the unceasing question, "Who am I? 

A shadow's image on the rainy pavement, 

walking in wonder past the vivid windows, 

a half contented ghost among my ghosts? 

Or one who, imagining light, air, sun, 

Can now take root in life, inherit love?" 



Alun Lewis 

IN HOSPITAL: POONA 

Last night I did not fight for sleep 
But lay awake from midnight while the world 
Turned its slow features to the moving deep 
Of darkness, till I knew that you were furled, 

Beloved, in the same dark watch as I. 
And sixty degrees of longitude beside 
Vanished as though a swan in ecstasy 
Had spanned the distance from your sleeping side. 

And like to swan or moon the whole of Wales 
Glided within the parish of my care: 
I saw the green tide leap on Cardigan, 
Your red yacht riding like a legend there. 

And the great mountains Dafydd and Llewelyn, 
Plynlimmon, Cader Idris and Eryri 

118 



ALUN LEWIS 

Threshing the darkness back from head and fin, 
And also the small nameless mining valley 

Whose slopes are scratched with streets and sprawling graves 

Dark in the lap of firwoods and great boulders 

Where you lay waiting, listening to the waves 

My hot hands touched your white despondent shoulders 

And then ten thousand miles of daylight grew 
Between us, arid I heard the wild daws crake 
In India's starving throat; whereat I knew 
That Time upon the heart can break 
But love survives the venom of the snake. 



Emanuel Litvinov 

POEM FOR THE ATOMIC AGE 

It is when they come with questions, 
how then shall we answer without shame? 
Shall we speak parables of barley and fishers, 
raise images falsely rural to vex 
the candid eye? There was a tree of evil: 
some had gathered fruit: it was better so, 
cutting the root and its worshippers. 

It was better so: there were black and white, 
just like a game in the parlour. 
Only this was played by heroes 
and we have verses to prove it. 

Once in the war a smooth stranger, 
more travelled than Columbus, explained: 
Races are different, each has a smell. 

119 



EMANUEL LITVINOV 

Negroes are rank like sweat, the Russian 
reeks of mothballs and potato, 
Germans of corpses, the Jews of gold 
and the gaudy Wop breathes garlic. 
But do not the English smell, we asked, 
just a little? Ah, I can only speak of soldiers. 
The characteristic odour is strong 
of Lifebouy soap: it is very good. 
And I, I do not smell, he said. 

There was another, a very wise owl 
with a mouse in his beak hooting 
sermons to the broken rafters: 
It is a matter of history, someone must write it 
and dead men, dead men tell no tales. 

And there was an Eye, cold as an oyster, 
with the green fire of the sea, 
and a Brain like a grey crab crawling 
intent upon the movement of its legs; 
but worst was the silence whose words 
stung like whips and remained unspoken. 

Egypt, December , 



NOTE FROM AN INTIMATE DIARY 

You must remember this, the cold turning year 
when absence was arbitrary and the silent hours 
wound endlessly a bright filament of pain 

when the thin children huddled against winter 

starving the earth of smiles and 

over Europe gnarled trees stood bare as crosses 

120 



EMANUEL LITVINOV 

you must remember for it is soon forgotten 

how easily a crust can give joy 

to birds and children in a time of famine 

evil should not be forgotten when idyllic 

summer throws bread to avid pigeons 

and the desperate amours of air-raid shelters 

become once more the white swans who gracefully 
symbolised love in the parks of our youth and 
whimsical rain spattered your summer frock 

to be happy once more is not enough 

one must remember what it is to be unhappy and 

how slyly the devils lurk in unwary shadows: 

let us not forget, my dear, our December of absence 

when we were fortunate still to be alive 

even though our brothers and sisters were dead 

like Caesar we must reward Jupiter for our luck 
and all those lesser gods who are fickle and vain 
else will they turn to crows and peck out our eyes: 

and one day we will weep so much 

a new lake will sail our children's swans . . . 

it will be the day when we remember. 

Egypt, December, 



121 



Norman McCaig 
TWO MUSICS 

In any hour the singers with mouths of gold 

and fates transparent on their brows like words 

trembling out of the mirror of a myth 

will trail their sad procession through your head, 

in a caterwauling night, in the storm of worlds 

insinuating the honeycomb from the grumbling wave 

in whose slow sides you see your den of love. 

This is your hand, this ivory nest of ghosts, 
and this your famished eye whose mediaeval 
feith dances worlds upon a needle nerve; 
angel with worlds and devil with his doubts 
will both surrender them; each to his rival 
will grant the space you walk in, and their love 
will chivvy you in tribes of another hand 
and through the peoples of an eye still blind. 

Falseness can never then speak in your look 
words I have never heard, nor faithfulness 
make its short pilgrimage from you to me, 
that will be all my treasure when I seek 
in the repeated song your silent voice. 
Nothing will change or grow under the sky 
but the transmuting myth whose words you'll be 
singing and sounding under the grumbling sea. 



122 



NORMAN MCCAIG 

YOU WITHIN LOVE 

You within love are lion leaping in darkness 

glorifying night with a fiercer day, 

passion of rivers leaping in curled dances, 

greed of sun in all the whirling dew. 

And love around you echoing only you 

conjures the spring in the year's every day. 

Bold sun, slim moon 

that trembles beyond virgin 

1 creep with you behind the lion's pounces, 

vanish in a morning glitter, rise with passion 

in an echoing spring burn every day. 

THE TYRANT APPLE IS EATEN 

You spoke keys and looked 
out of your mind's black book 
charming, unspeakable clues 
that led my learning eyes 

to split the world's ball 
and greet magician and devil, 
who now make you ancient 
and love a century's habit. 

We lie in your cunning kindness, 
my grey in your thin hands, 
quiet as a cobweb, dumb-struck 
like a devil in a saint's book. 



123 



Hugh Macdiarmid 



THE MAN IN THE MOON 

The moonbeams kelter i the lift, 
An Earth, the bare auld stane, 
Glitters aneath the seas o Space, 
White as a mammoth's bane. 

An, lifted owre the gowden wave, 
Peers a dumfoun'ered Thocht, 
Wi keethin sicht o a' there is, 
An bodily sicht o nocht. 

(kelter - undulate; lift - sky; keethin sicht - sight of the keethings or 
subsurface shimmer caused by a school of fish) 

THE GLEN OF SILENCE 

By this cold shuddering fit of feAr 
My heart divines a presence here, 
Goddess or ghost yclept; 
Wrecker of homes . . . 

Where have I heard a silence before 
Like this that only a lone bird's cries 
And the sound of a brawling burn to-day 
Serve in this wide empty glen but to emphasize? 

Every doctor knows it the stillness of foetal death, 
The indescribable silence over the abdomen then! 
A silence literally heard because of the way 
It stands out in the auscultation of the abdomen. 

124 



HUGH MACDIARMJD 

Here is an identical silence, picked out 

By a bickering burn and a lone bird's wheeple 

The foetal death in this great cleared glen 

Where the fear-tholladh nan tighern has done his foul work 

The tragedy of an unevolved people. 

(Fear-tholladh nan tighem - Destroyer of homes) 

PERFECT 

(On the Western Seaboard of South Uist) 
(Los muertos abren los ojos a los quc viven) 

I found a pigeon's skull on the machair, 

All the bones pure white and dry, and chalky, 

But perfect, 

Without a crack or a flaw anywhere 

At the back, rising out of the beak, 
Were twin domes like bubbles of thin bone, 
Almost transparent, where the brain had been 
That fixed the tilt of the wings. 

(machair - shingle or cobble beach) 

O WHA'S BEEN HERE AFORE ME, LASS 

O wha's the bride that cairries the bunch 
O' thistles blinterin white? 
Her cuckold bridegroom little dreids 
What he sail ken this nicht. 

For closer than gudeman can come 
And closer to'r than hersel, 

125 



HUGH MACDIARMID 

Whs. didna need lier maidenheid 
Has wrocht his purpose fell. 

wha's been here afore me, lass, 
And hoo did he get in? 

A man that deed or I was born 
This evil thing has din. 

And left, as it were on a corpse, 
Your maidenheid to me? 
Nae lass, gudeman, sin Time began 
'S hed ony mair to gie. 

But I can gie ye kindness, lad, 
And a pair o willin hands, 
And ye sail hae my briests like stars, 
My limbs like willow wands. 

And on my lips ye'll heed nac mair, 
And in my hair forget, 
The seed o a' the men that in 
My virgin womb hae met... 

(blintering - glimmering; Nae lass etc. -no lass, good man, since 
time began, has had any more to give) 

MILK-WORT AND BOG COTTON 

Cwa een like milk-wort and bog-cotton hair! 

1 love you, earth, in this mood best o' a' 
When the shy spirit like a laich wind moves 
And frae the lift nae shadow can fa' 

126 



HUGH MACDIARMID 

Since there's nocht left to thraw a shadow there 
Owre een like milk- wort and milk-white cotton hair. 

Wad that nae leaf upon anither wheeled 

A shadow either and nae root need dern 

In sacrifice to let sic beauty be! 

But deep surroondin' darkness I discern 

Is aye the price o' licht. Wad licht revealed 

Naething but you, and nicht nocht else concealed. 

(cwa - come away; cen - eyes; milk- wort - the bluebell; laich - low; 
lift - sky) 



MUNESTRUCK 

When the warl's couped roun' as a pcerie 
That licht-lookin craw o a body, the mime, 
Sits on the fower cross-win's 
Peerin aa roun. 

She's seen me she's seen me an straucht 
Loupit clean on the quick o my hert. 
The quhither o cauld gowd's fairly 
Gicn me a stcrt. 

An the roorin o oceans noo 
Is peeriewcerie to me: 
Thunner's a tinklin bell: an Time 
Whuds like a flee. 

(couped - tumbled; pcerie - spinningtop; licht - light; craw - crow; munc - 
moon; fower - four; straucht - straight; loupit - leapt; quhither - beam; 
peerieweeric - diminished to a mere thread of sound) 



127 



HUGH MACDIARMID 

THE EEMIS-STANE 

T the how-dumb-deid o the cauld hairst nicht 

The warl like an eemis-stane 

Wags i the lift; 

An my eerie memories fa' 

Like a yowdendrift. 

Like a yowdendrift so's I couldna read 
The words cut oot i the stane 
Had the fug o fame 
An history's hazelraw 
No' yirdit thaim. 

(how-dumb-deid - "the dead of night"; hairst - harvest-autumn; warl 
- world; eemis-stane - tiltingrock; lift - sky; yowendrift - swirl of snow; 
fug - moss; hazelraw - lichen) 

THE WATERGAW 

Ae weet forenicht i the yow-trummle 

I saw yon antrin thing. 

A watergaw wi its chitterin licht 

Ayont the on-ding; 

An I thocht o the last wild look ye gied 

Afore ye deed! 

There was nae reek i the laverock's hoose 

That nicht-an nane i mine; 

But I hae thocht o that foolish licht 

Ever sin syne; 

An I think that mebbe at last I ken 

What your look meant then. 

(weet - wet; yow-trummle - ewe-tremble : a cold spell after sheep shearing; 
antrin - rare; wutergaw - rainbow; chitterin - shivering; ayont - against; 
on-ding - downpour; reek - smoke; laverock's - lark's; hoose - house) 

128 



HUGH MACDIARMID 

IN THE HEDGEBACK 

It was a wild black nicht, 

But i the hert o't we 

Drave back the darkness wi a bleeze o licht, 

Ferrer than een could see. 

It was a wild black nicht, 

But o the snell air we 

Kept juist eneuch to hinder the heat 

Meltin us utterly. 

It was a wild black nicht, 

But o the win's roar we 

Kept juist eneuch to hear oor herts beat 

Owre it triumphantly. 

It was a wild black nicht, 

But o the Earth we 

Kept juist eneuch underneath us to ken 

That a warl used to be. 

(sncll - bitter cold) 

Sorley Maclean 

(from his own Gaelic) 

KNIGHTSBRIDGE OF LIBYA (>*, 19*2) 

Though I am to-day against the breast of battle, not here my 
burden and extremity; not Rommel's guns and tanks, but that 
my darling should be crooked and a liar. 

129 



SORLEY MACLEAN 

TO A DEPRAVED LYING WOMAN 

If I were dead in the Desert as you would like me to be 
would not your lies be luxuriant, many-coloured on my 
corpse. For every grain of dry sand choking my mouth and 
eye, you would have a lie to match it Himeimat would 
not be such a pile. There would not be a corpse between 
El Ragil and bloody Eleut El Tamar who would not prefer 
as clothing his load of sand to your nimble lie. After your 
adultery and Nancy-boy who misled you with his warm 
money, your ready lie would put a cloak over the sordidness 
of your vicissitudes. 

THE NIGHTMARE 

Oiie night of the two bad years when I thought my love 
was maimed with a hurt as bad as woman has had since Eve's 
generation, we were together in a dream beside the stone 
wall that is between the boys' and girls' playgrounds of my 
first school; she was in my arms and my mouth was going 
to her lips when the loathsome head started suddenly from 
behind the wall; and the long foul dim fingers seized my 
throat in a sudden grip, and the words of despair followed: 
Too late, you fool. 

from DAIN EILE 

My eye is not on Calvary, nor on Bethlehem the Blessed, but 
on a foul-smelling backland in Glasgow, where life rots as 
it grows; and on a room in Edinburgh, a room of poverty 
and pain, where the diseased infant writhes and wallows till 
death. 

130 



SORLEY MACLEAN 

from DAIN do EIMHIR 

XVII 

Multitude of the skies, gold riddle of millions of stars, cold, 
distant, lustrous, beautiful, silent, unconscious, unwelcoming. 

Fullness of knowledge in their course, emptiness of chartless 
ignorance, a universe moving in silence, a mind alone in its 
bounds. 

Not they moved my thoughts, not the marvel of their chill 
course; to us there is no miracle but in love, lighting of a 
universe in the kindling of your face. 

XIX 

I gave you immortality and what did you give me? Only 
the sharp arrows of your beauty, a harsh onset and piercing 
sorrow, bitterness of spirit and a sore gleam of glory. 

If I gave you immortality you gave it to me; you put an edge 
on my spirit and radiance in my song. And though you spoiled 
my understanding of the conflict, yet, were I to see you again, 
I should accept more and the whole of it. 

Were I, after oblivion of my trouble, to see before me on 
the plain of the land of youth the gracious form of your 
beauty, I should prefer it there, although my weakness would 
return, and to peace of spirit again to be wounded. 

O yellow-haired, lovely girl, you tore my strength and in- 
clined my course from its aim: but, if I reach my place, the 
high wood of the men of song, you are the fire of my lyric 
you made a poet of me through sorrow. 



SORLEY MACLEAN 

I raised this pillar on the shifting mountain of time, but it 
is a memorial-stone that will be heeded till the Deluge, and, 
though > you will be married to another and ignorant of my 
struggle, your glory is my poetry, after the slow rotting of 
your beauty. 

XXII 

I walked with my reason out beside the sea : we were together 
but it kept a little distance from me. 

Then it turned saying: Is it true you heard that your fair love 
is marrying early on Monday? 

I checked the heart that rose in my torn, swift breast and said: 
most likely, why should I lie? 

How should I think I would seize the radiant golden star, that 
I could catch it and put it prudently in my pocket? 

I did not take a cross's death in the sore extremity of Spain, 
and how then should I expect the one new gift of fate? 

I followed only a way that was small, mean, low, dry, and 
lukewarm: and how then should I meet the thunderbolt of 
love? 

But had I the choice again, and stood on that headland, I 
should leap from heaven or hell with a whole spirit and heart. 



132 



SORLEY MACLEAN 

XXX 

A Bolshevik who never gave heed to queen or to king, yet, 
had we Scotland free, Scotland equal to our love, a white, 
spirited, generous- Scotland, without petty, paltry, vapid bour- 
geoisie, without the loathesomeness of capitalists, without 
hateful, crass graft, the mettlesome Scotland of the free, the 
Scotland of our blood, the Scotland of our love, I would 
break the legitimate law of the kings, I would break the sure 
law of the wise, I would proclaim you queen of Scotland in 
spite of the new republic. 

LIV 

You were dawn on the Cuillin and benign day on the Clarach , 
the sun on his elbows in the golden stream and the white rose 
that breaks the horizon. 

Glitter of sails on a sunlit firth, blue of the ocean and aureate 
sky, the young morning in your head of hair and in your 
clear lovely cheeks. 

My jewel of dawn and night your face and beloved kindness, 
though with the grey shaft of grief my young morning is 
transfixed. 



LV 

I do not see the sense of my toil putting thoughts in a dying 
tongue, now when the whoredom of Europe is murder erect 
and agony: but we have been given a million years, a frag- 
ment of a sad, growing portion, the courage and patience of 
the many and the marvel of a beautiful face. 

133 



Joseph Gordon Macleod 

From THE ECLIPTIC: CANCER, or, THE CRAB 

V 

Moonpoison, mullock of sacrifice, 
Suffuses the veins of the eyes 
Till the retina, mooncoloured, 
Sees the sideways motion of the cretin crab 
Hued thus like a tortoise askew in the glaucous moonscape 
A flat hot boulder it 
Lividly in the midst of the Doldrums 
Sidles 

The lunatic unable to bear the silent course of constellations 
Mad and stark naked 
Sidles 

The obol on an eyeball of a man dead from elephantiasis 
Sidles 

All three across heaven with a rocking motion. 
The Doldrums: "region of calms and light baffling winds 
near Equator." 

But the calms are rare 

The winds baffling but not light 

And the drunken boats belonging to the Crab Club 

Rock hot and naked to the dunning of the moon 

All in the pallescent Sargasso weed 

And windbound, seeking distraction by the light of deliverance 

For 

What are we but the excrement of non-existent noon? 

(Truth like starlight crookedly) 
What are we all but "burial grounds abhorred by the moon?" 

And did the Maoris die of measles? So do we. 
134 



JOSEPH GORDON MACLEOD 

But there is no snow here, nor lilies. 

The night is glutinous 

In a broad hearth crisscross thorn clumps 

Smoulder: distant fireback of copse 

Throws back silence: glassen ashes gleam in pond 

The constellations which have stopped working (?) 

Shimmer. No dead leaf jumps. 

On edge of lawn a glowworm 

Hangs o'ut its state-recognized torchlamp 

Blocks of flowers gape dumb as windows with blinds drawn 

And in the centre the rugate trees 

Though seeming as if they go up in smoke 

Are held like cardboard where they are. 

Bluehot it is queer fuel to make the moon move. 

Agesias said: "Nero was an artist because he murdered his 

mother 
Sensibility (subliminal) is of more importance than moral 

obligation (prandial)." 
But Agesias paints cottages in watercolours and fears his 

own mother 
Barbarieus said: "I am passionately in love with Gito who 

spurns me for Prainoe" 
But until he saw them together he was merely disturbed by 

Gito's eyelashes 
Galonus said: "The subsequent shrivelling of an orchid doesn't 

alter the value of its beauty." 
Decanus said: "Joy in nothing. Either dies joy or what 

produced it." 

But Galonus is attractive to women, Decanus obese, poor, 
obtuse. 

135 



JOSEPH GORDON MACLEOD 

Epinondas said: "I have been a liar, now no longer so." 

Zeuxias said: " What I have always been, I shall remain, a fool." 

Is it better to be self-deceived or lazy? 

Epator was drunk for two days: Theodoras traced his disease 
to college, Iphogenes saw God and died, 

And so down the Alphabet, aye, and the Persian, 

With variegated gutturals and sibilants, the Gaelic with 
diphthongs and triphthongs, 

Choctaw with three different clicks 

Each letter is somebody 

But the Crab is nobody 

Nobody 

Nobody 

A ganglion of neurotic imitations 

Composed of each letter in turn 

Jointed by conflicts he does not want 

A word that never existed with a sense nobody can understand. 

Suffering for the sins his father refused to commit 

He sits and thinks about the twiddling toes of Gunerita 

A boy-girl or girl-boy of an average pulchritude 

Haunted by phantoms of his female self 

Whom he was never seen but composed himself, thus : 

Breasts of Augustina brains of Beatrice 

Arms of Capucine on the motherliness of Dorothea 

Eyes of Evelyn in the brow of Francesca 

Fragrance of Gretchen with the understanding of Helen 

This he desires, but despises: 

Bhah! 

Always sideways, crabs walk. 

Either he is not fit for this world 

Or this world not fit for him. But which? 

136 



JOSEPH GORDON MACLEOD 

After all this pain of development is there neither interval 

nor reward? 

They lured him with promises, 
Now it has all slipped sideways 

What is the good, I ask you, of going into a melting-pot 
If fated to melt again after getting out of it? 
The answers are: He is not out of it 
Determined to budge not from yon slippery rock 
Not a yard, no, nor an inch, no, nor a barleycorn's breadth 
For chance is not blind but unimpedable 
And we call it blind because 
Since we frustrate it only by chance 
We prefer to shut our own eyes. 

The crab however crawls on. 

He must therefore be a crab subnormal. 

One day, one of his foreclaws, assembled as usual by many 

men, 

Being longer than the other, turns and pinches his tentacles 
With the other he pinches the persons that assembled the 

long one 

Next day the short one, equally alien, is the longer 
And the process is reversed. 
In mass production one hand never knows 
The evil the other is inspiring it to do 
This is a heretic even to die faiths he fails to believe 
So worthless, awkward, unintelligible, 
The crab crawls on. 

He has suffered because he was ugly 

Let him be cruel now that he is attractive 

137 



JOSEPH GORDON MACLEOD 

Caring not whether he fructifies cruelty or is merely hard on self. 
We trap our goldfinch trapping our souls therewinged 
Sacrifice our mad gods to the madder gods: 
We hymn the two sons of Leda and Zeus-Aegis-bearer 
We don't. We drink and drivel. My 
poor Catullus, do stop being such a 
Fool. Admit that lost which as you watch is 
gone. O, once the days shone very bright for 
you, when where that girl you loved so (as 110 
other will be) called, you came and came. And 
then and there were odd things done and many 
which you wanted and she didn't not want. 
Yes indeed the days shone very bright for 
you. But now she doesn't want it. 

Don't you either, 

booby. Don't keep chasing her. Don't live in 
misery, carry on, be firm, be hardened. 
Goodbye, girl: Catullus is quite hardened, 
doesn't want you, doesn't ask, if you're not 
keen though sorry you'll be to be not asked. 
Yes, poor sinner... what is left in life for 
you? Who'll now go with you? Who'll be attracted? 
Whom'll you love now? Whom say you belong to? 
Whom'll you now kiss? Whose lips'll you nibble? 
Now you, Catullus! you've decided to be hardened. 

How can I be hardened when the whole world is fluid? 
O Aphrodite Panddmos, your badgers rolling in the moonlit 
corn 

Corn blue-bloom-covered carpeting the wind 

Wind humming like distant rooks 

Distant rooks busy like factory whirring metal 

138 



JOSEPH GORDON MACLEOD 

Whirring metallic starlings bizarre like cogwheels missing teeth 
These last grinning like the backs of old motor cars 
Old motor cars smelling of tragomaschality 
Tragomaschality denoting the triumph of self over civilization 
Civilization being relative our to Greek 
Greek to Persian 
Persian to Chinese 

Chinese politely making borborygms to show satisfaction 
Satisfaction a matter of capacity 
Capacity not significance: otherwise with an epigram 
Epigrams poems with a strabismus 

Strabismus being as common spiritually as optically the moon 
The moon tramping regular steps like a policeman past the 

houses of the Zodiac 

And the Zodiac itself, whirling and flaming sideways 
Circling from no point returning through no point 
Endlessly skidding as long as man skids, though never moving, 
Wavers, topples, dissolves like a sandcastle into acidity. 

Is there nothing more soluble, more gaseous, more imper- 
ceptible? 
Nothing. 

Charles Madge 

IN CONJUNCTION 

Now in the circulating torrent of the stars 
Certain events are drawn correct and clear 
Faces that wear expressions of anguish and delight 

Signs unmistakable of the heavenly progress 

The flying planet leaves the night house 

The two twined figures fill the highest hemisphere 

139 



CHARLES MADGE 

From which we conclude peace, and grateful offerings 
While the bird of war, thunderless on leaden roof 
No shadow shows on the galactic brilliance of the streaming 
breast 

And beyond the fated, tragic, foursquare, immovable house 
Evenings under trees of calm, descending evening of rest 
Relenting over battlefields, evenings upholding us 
Among alarms, rust and the dead, waiting to be blest. 

THE BIRDS OF TIN 

The birds of tin 
We cannot eat. 

We play with them 
They cost us nothing 
The birds of tin 
Municipal 

They fly, they float 
They wave to us 
From far away 
They come to rest 
Perfectly flat 
medals 

Of innumerable sizes 
On the surface of the sea. 
Some are enormously large 
Some are six feet high 
Some you can hold 
Some you can put in your mouth 

140 



CHARLES MADGE 

Some slip through your fingers 
And there are microscopic 

tiny birds. 

In vain we speak to them 
In vain we call to them 
Or entreat them to open their wings. 
They are affixed to walls 
Pinned to the sky 
Attached by screws 
Tied by chains 
The birds of tin 
Are dead. 

DELUSIONS VI 

Without surprise, on that not distant shore 
Wandering feet mounting towards the trees 
A pilgrim guide, until, just as before 
The infant brook and half-hid house he sees. 

The same, the inarticulate music moves 
Depending foliage of annual green 
And mutters through the fastness of his groves 
Meaningless comment on the well-known scene. 

He listens, ears pricked up, and strains his eyes 

On to the polar image of his heart. 

A retina matured with other skies 

Receives the impressions that the woods impart. 

Oh wanderer, do not turn back your feet 
To the green haunt and the imprisoned wood. 
Enough that trickling streams ever repeat 
Their senseless noise to perfect solitude. 

141 



CHARLES MADGE 

A NIGHTLY DEED 

Sir, the night is darker now 
And the wind blows stronger, 

Fails my heart I know not how 
I can go no longer. 

Spectres rise on every side, 
Spectres of the Brocken, 

With their bony arms out wide 
I can see them mocking. 

Empty as an old tin can 
Is each horrid phantom, 

Neither ghost they are nor man, 
I can't understand 'em. 

If Napoleon's in his grave 
And Bruin in the mountain, 

This must be the ocean wave 
Roaring in the fountain. 

Eyes no eyes but drops of lead 
Pennies and- a farthing, 

There is nothing to be said, 
But the poor man starving. 

See his cold and empty grate, 

See his little cottage, 
See his cold and empty plate, 

He has got no pottage. 



142 



CHARLES MADGE 

Sir the night is darker now, 

And the wind blows cruel, 
Let us go, I know not how, 

And fetch him winter fuel. 

RUMBA OF THE THREE LOST SOULS 

Cold and holy oak 
Hear the raven croak: 
The policeman's helmet 
Has bewitched our feet. 

The helmet on the stalk 
Is the way that we walk 
And we sit, having dived, 
Fully dressed, on the seat. 

Here together where we fell 
By the merman's well 
In the light of the trees 
Of the dead man's street. 

Undivided are we 
Numbers one two and three 
We were let down 
By the knotted sheet. 

Rhythm beyond control 
Is the lot of each soul 
And because we fell together 
Here again we meet. 

The wizard in the yard 
Took the heart that was hard. 
Not all Scotland can recall 
What the eagles eat. 

143 



CHARLES MADGE 

TO MAKE A BRIDGE 

To make a bridge 
Between poetry and prose 

To make a movable bridge 
Between this year and next year 

To know the male from the female embryo 
By auscultation 

To enable the plotting of barometric areas 

To make a bridge 
Between heaven and earth 

To make a bridge 

Between man and man 

And between men ^nd men 

A bridge across the grey dividing river 

A skeleton bridge 

(Their bones fly electrically 

To arch themselves in a system of stresses 

Exactly and patiently 

Between the lines of the two camps) 

A flying bridge 
In the dark 'air 
Sensible of the currents 

A bridge between you and me 

To make such a bridge 

Foresight and cunning 

The development of additional organs 

144 



CHARLES MADGE 

In peace 

The building of new brains 

Lobe by lobe 

In the wide spaces and the free pathways of the wind 

The collection of materials 

The sorting of minerals 

The naming of substances 

The enumeration of all these 

And the congratulation of all those 

Who live in a certain part of a certain place 

The co-ordinates of pleasure 

In the category of bridges 

We have this bridge and that bridge 

But whatever the bridge 

And wherever the bridge 

There is only one space 

Hungry, roaring and indivisible 

Under the bridge 

To be kind to each other 

To help in construction 

To be sorry 

To be aware of the difficulties 

To give treatment 

To arrange food supplies 

To make shelters and centres for the construction of bridg< 

To allow time 

To put together and to take to pieces 

Talking quietly and thinking loudly 

We have undertaken. 

145 



Os Matron 

NOCTURNAL 

The roof of midnight, hushed and high; 
covers the house in silence deep; then I 
hear laughter from my daughter in her sleep. 

So gay a laugh yet 

like a folk song hung from the secret 

melancholy thread holding all happiness. 

I know that summer has facades disturbed 

like curtains on a stage by small winds of sadness 

blossom in joy lets fall a white tear 

the curving moon can be a scimitar 

roses are barbed. 

So must her dreams be. 

Her girlish light must scale the cliff of sleep 
by paths unimagineably pure. 

O sea 

forgo this dreamer, for her dear gold 
I covet; her daylight laughter caught so lovingly 
in sleep slips like light into dark water 
to a desperate fathom. 

So must her dreams be ... 



146 



William Montgomerie 

ELEGY FOR WILLIAM SOUTAR 

A narrowing of knowledge to one window to a door 
Swinging inward on a man in a windless room 
On a man inwardly singing 

on a singing child 

Alone and never alone a lonely child 
Singing 

in a mirror dancing to a dancing child 
Memory sang and words in a mimic dance 
Old words were young and a child sang. 

A narrowing of knowledge to one room to a doorway 
To a door in a wall swinging bringing him friends 
A narrowing of knowledge to 

an arrow in bone in the marrow 
An arrow 

death 

strung on the string of the spine. 

To the live crystal in the palm and the five fingers 
To the slow- thirty years' pearl in the hand 
Shelled in a skull in the live face of a statue 
Sea-flowered on the neck of broken marble 
Sunken fourteen years in that aquarium. 



147 



Nicholas Moore 



WINTER AND RED BERRIES 

Come, put off your gown of smooth lilac, 
And whisper your intricacies to winter. 
The snow will have a better ear than I 
For all that lovers say red heresies! 

How can I be a heretic? How can 
I who am man be any other thing? 
My answer is compounded of sad guns 
Answering other guns with sounds as sad, 

And these repeat the questions of the last. 
My dear, the time for murmurings is past. 
Here come the conquerors, here tread the beasts, 
Wolves, antelopes fleeing before the wind, 

And nothing I can say will now be kind! 
Befriend the wolf, befriend the stricken deer, 
Befriend the camel and the shy tapir, 
These animals are lovelier than... 

O yet strip off your lilac gown, 

Whisper and sing, and I will slide between 

Your hands like so much sand: like so much wine 

The bouquet of your flesh turn sad by mine. 



148 



NICHOLAS MOORE 

THE HAIR'S-BREADTH 
(For Priscilla) 

Tell me, hair of her head, where I should lie 
Who wish to praise her in my poetry? 
Tell me, hair of her thigh, what I should do 
Who wish to make my image of her true? 

Dog by the lamp-post, God above the clouds, 
Am I to follow either with my words? 
Is she a bitch to be by flesh accosted, 
Or holy image and by blood attested? 

Tell me, hair of her whole anatomy, 
With what attentions I may make her happy? 
Tell me, hair of her heart, what I can be 
To tender her in all world's misery? 

The blood of love may flow from me to her, 
But how can I describe it by a hair? 

FRED APOLLUS AT FAVA'S 

My sexual feats 
It is accounts of these 
Each friend entreats. 

They do not care what women wear or what artistic fashion 
meets 

My best approval. 
Love is all. 

149 



NICHOLAS MOORE 

There are no swans 
But Leda's, and its hiss, 
Majestic once, 

Grows tame with telling over tea and the inevitable buns. 
They hate Picasso 
Art's no go. 

They only like the rude 

Reclining nude 
The shiny-covered magazines all show, 

This svelte form, 

The velvet norm 
Of their romantic discipline, 

Whose wild imaginations flow 
Towards flesh more bright than I have ever seen. 

And am I like a god 

Who sit and nod 
At their remarks? Experienced in all 

The ways of love, 

Each subtle move? 
I hate them as their hard words rise 

Over their plates of pork and fall 
Against my ear. They take me by surprise; 

For, suddenly, I know myself a jealous man, 

An also-ran 
Unfit to face the company of such, 

Who obviously touch 
Such transports of delight as I 

Have never known. How can I qualify? 

150 



NICHOLAS MOORE 

It only seems I have my dreams and hopes, 

Those bitter shapes 
Of unloved breasts and thighs that pass, 

(Each one my golden ass!) 
My sexual feats are all my friends', 
Not mine. Not me to whom the red tongue sends 

Such thrills. 
(It is the thought that kills!) 

These men 
(How vainly!) turn towards me again. 

ACT OF LOVE 

The lover, the lover will always remember 

That dark man grown hideous with age 

His rough hands upon her white thighs, and the vessel 

Gleaming with liquids, ready for his rage, 

Holding this moment out of his whole past, 
The indecisive dream of wonder, romance: 
He will see her as an angel, the nicest 
Person in the world, and himself as once 

He was, handsome, young. He will always 
Remember how she took him to her bed 
And performed there under his burning hands, 
Until in a cool sleep they lay like dead. 

And she too will remember this great love. 
It will be bright in her mind. She will live 
In the thought of it, and the real present 
Will indeed be most hard to forgive. 



NICHOLAS MOORE 



And he, too, has been betrayed, 

Will see her lover poised forever over her, 

Held in that lusty pose. And he will stop, 

As his hand moves like a wind in her deep hair, 

To contemplate this infidelity, 

How upon his marriage-bed in joy they lay. 

And forgiveness, which is so easy, will mean nothing 

To one who cannot forget that perfidy. 



THE PHALLIC SYMBOL 

I saw my scattered hopes upon the floor, 
And with them played a horned girl. She was true 
To that sculpturesque definition. She was blue 
In a bright dress, blue with blue bows. 

Behind her stood a man beside the door 
To which my eyes rose as he entered, false 
With relief I did not feel, certain 
It could not be myself, though who else 

Could ever have found the room or known 
The scene? It was as though a shadow 
Of my old self stood indolent by the door, 
His face hidden in the grey veil of evening 

Which, a shadow itself, encroached across the floor. 
Then all the toys cowered in childish terror 
In the corner of the room, and the girl became 
A little goat, with a beard grey as the river, 

152 



NICHOLAS MOORE 

Standing uncertain in such a curious meadow 
Of dusty floor and cowering toys : and dread 
Passed like a shadow across the waiting room. 
The man turned from the door and went away: 

I saw him retreating down an avenue, 

Sinister, unequivocal. And I knew 

When I looked at the room again the girl would be 

Blue, with the blue dress, and the bow blue 

In her beautiful bronze hair: that she would stand 
Like a statue, cold and pure, her lips shaped 
To a smile: that she would be kind and womanly, 
The very definition of what 1 hoped 

To find. And 1 saw the shadow had filled 
The room, and in the darkness I saw nothing. 
I heard the dry pad of an animal's feet in the hall, 
And then I knew I had no hope at all. 

O ROSE, O RAINBOW 

Watching the night contract the viridian fields 
Into the closeness of its hands, the moon 
Athwart the dewy grass, Mr. Orlimpit 
Raises his hands towards the glossy dawn, 
Imagining daybreak. 

"O Rose, O Rainbow, O hymn of truth, O dew, 
Wet my hands, bring me wonder, bring me You, 
O great Venus, O doll, o ventriloquist, 
Thy sweet rainbow-coloured hands in the evening mist, 
Bringing me rapture 

153 



NICHOLAS MOORE 

The exact cadence of his prayer is difficult 
To capture; nor do the fields, closed 
In the hands of night, feel anything but dark 
As towards the dawn his vain hymns are composed, 
Vainly imploring 

That dry-eyed goddess. Time in itself is robbed 
By the dewy dark of the fields, and the houses stand 
Like scaffolds thrown in the shadows 
Of the frigid moon. Who can expect to demand 
The rose or the rainbow? 

Mr. Orlimpit wanders among his scaffolds, 
Erect in the bleak night, false as is dark, 
Hoping always for a new star to break, hearing 
Only the vain lovers chittering in the park, 
Hoping for heaven. 

"I am a fool," says Mr. Orlimpit, "to hope 
For anything beyond death. Death is surely 
Peace enough. I shall die some day." And then 
Mr. Orlimpit imagines his daybreak, its limpid, purely 
Crystalline virtue, 

ALCESTIS IN ELY 
(for Priscilla) 

Entering casually the precincts of the Cathedral, 
Those old walls, the courtyard with the chestnuts, 
Alcestis moves, unmindful of Admetos, 
The modern woman. 

154 



NICHOLAS MOORE 

Yet her face is pale under the crumbling arches, 
As she touches the unnatural red of her lips 
With gentle fingers and like a ghost wanders 
Over the cobbles. 

And there is no-one to bring her back from death 
Nor to remind her of that unmindful king: 
Alcestis is alone and cold in Ely 
Among the ancient 

Glories of a newer religion. As she takes 
Her coffee in Ye Olde Teashoppe she cries 
In exasperation, "Where are that man's strong arms?" 
In this town of whispers. 

And on its old stones the great Cathedral rises 
Like an enormous beast', shaking loose stones 
From its side; and the wind blows in the chestnuts, 
Gently discerning. 



THE LITTLE GIRL 

Yes, true, children will take advantage of 
Any little gesture: yet here I saw 
More than the villainous eye, the loving 
Yet loathing, irrepressible dilemna. 

The little girl was old enough to be 
My lover, yet she faltered, and I knew 
That to my hand her breast would make reply 
Hazardously, and probably not true 

J5S 



NICHOLAS MOORE 

With responses curious and defined 
By some irreparable hoydenish glamour. 
O I tried hard to reach her mind, 
Yet in her eye there was no glimmer; 

Only her legs stretched long upon the sheet 
And the big, grown-up, cold-looking feet. 

INCIDENTS IN PLAYFAIR HOUSE 

I 

There are questions that must be asked 
That will not we think be answered. 

Fury is hand in glove with fate: the lion 

Is solemn behind the door, the weeping forest 

Claims us with its juices, its citrons and pears. 
We are all alike unemployed soldiers. 

And then at a distance a girl stands, 
Hands upon her breasts, expectant, fond, 

As if waiting for the dark future to come 
And wink at her with the eyes of a clown. 

We see her. But do not believe. Deceive 
Yourself, sir, with many speculations! 

Go, drown your horror with philosophy! 

Yet what are these questions but the truth that we deserve? 

156 



NICHOLAS MOORE 
II 

O there are monstrous storms! Even the evil 
If we arc to believe in such, originally 

Protest at the greatest evils, devils 
That irk even the illiterate heart. Start 

Praying now, fathomless mouths! The green 
Boy is in the field watching the cows 

And the prancing horses. The dance, 

The horse-dance, the cow-dance, the love-dance 

Advances to its climax. Perfection 
Through all storm gleams like a sheet. 

Ill 

Janet, the girl with the bow-tie, the male 
Of her family, innately female, 

Pisses into the bath-tub. It is her shrubbery. 
When she was five it is our custom 

To probe the past to find die present 
She played with little Antony's penis, 

And envied it. And this all ended 

In a bow-tie. What a comical history! 

And now the rush of her water in the bath-tub 
Causes the erect Colonel listening in his study 

The greatest excitement of his life, the Colonel 
Who has murdered Zulus and shot fifteen bears. 



NICHOLAS MOORE 

Janet is a queer girl, but very handsome: 
Much sought after, she is beautiful, but cold. 

IV 

There is much to be sought. The two plain girls, 
One of whom dresses like a man, 

Love to be violent as men, to 
Talk of art and literature. They like 

The male about them. O attractively 
The words lisp. The hero grins 

In the doorway like a monkey, while they, 
Oblivious to the watching eye, make passes, 

Body to body, breast to breast, and lie 
In a purely literary agony. 

O how the oval suns revolve 
Blindingly behind each lover's eye! 



Douglas Newton 



GAIETY OF DESCENDANTS 

A Sailor's Song 

My calm and herculean dad 
Had muscles and the rarest knack 
To shrug the muscles that he had 



DOUGLAS NEWTON 

Along his back into a mask: 
Mask of a lion's white grimace. 

But ah! Alas! 

It scared my mother from his bed, 
So he's alqne and she's alone: 

But I will wear a nightingale 
Tattooed upon my shoulder to 
Entice my friends into my arms; 
Or if my heart's intentions fail 
To fly me to the Scilly Islands, 
Isles of Scilly, Scilly. 

INVASION WEATHER 

Two August voices 

The summer flows in golden waves 
To wash the trees and clean away 
A winter's umber from the leaves 

And leave them light as glazer's green. 
The valley lakes of gold divide 
Before the binders' even pace, 

Ebb and abide in lively pools, 

Until the labourers come 

To labour home the wheaty foam. 

Harvest! Harvest! the farmers all 

The Fathers roll their eyeballs underground- 

All the young fork-bearing Neptunes ah! 

159 



DOUGLAS NEWTON 

But now the avid Fathers sit them down 
Upon the fresh raw wracks to supervise 
The madmen coupled to the squealing swine: 

Yet still the lovers lie between the sheaves 

Though an enormous head glares through the soil 

Still thigh is whispering to thigh, 

And the gold breast rolls on the bronze chest, 

An orange softly rolled upon a table; 

The little drummer, even's, allowed his dance; 

So summer flows. While under Mycenae 
The ghost of Agamemnon, like a bee, 
Hums in the groining of his vaulted tomb. 

. Norman Nicholson 

THE BURNING BUSH 

When Moses, musing in the desert, found 
The thorn bush spiking up from the hot ground, 
And saw the branches on a sudden bear 
The crackling yellow barberries of fire, 

He searched his learning and imagination 
For any logical, neat explanation, 
And turned to go, but turned again and stayed 
And faced the fire and knew it for his God. 

I too have seen the briar alight like coal, 
The love that burns, the flesh that's ever whole, 
And many times have turned and left it there, 
Saying: "It's prophecy but metaphor/' 

160 



NORMAN NICHOLSON 

But stinging tongues like John the Baptist shout: 
"That this is metaphor is no way out. 
It's dogma too, or you make God a liar; 
The bush is still a bush, and fire is fire." 

NOW IN THE TIME OF THIS MORTAL LIFE 

Frost is tight upon the land 
Constricts it with a bony hand, 
Yet with blade sharp as a nail 
The immanent crocus drills the soil. 
Man's nerves aver his spinal wish 
And feel the Word becoming Flesh. 

God watches soil and spirit mated, 
And consecrates what he created, 
By raising manhood unto God, 
By raising raisins unto blood; 
The sacramental prongs reach down 
And lift earth to the skies again. 
Incarnate God shines brighter than 
Flower or frost, or sea or sun. 
The Spirit in the limbs of man 
Hardens like a skeleton, 
And the earth feels a new life burrow 
Along its stony bones like marrow. 
For now the ritual seed is sown 
To grow the stalk to bear the grain 
To yield the flour to make the bread 
That sinful hands shall turn to God. 



161 



NORMAN NICHOLSON 

The hooks of love are in our limbs 
And hoist through the scholastic times 
When bursting bud and bomb deny 
The Manichaean heresy. 
And man finds voice to curse once more 
The evil in the holy fear, 
And man finds heart to praise again 
The hope within the evil pain, 
Christ-knife heals the wound it prunes, 
And carves its gospel on the bones, 
That man may hear what God has heard, 
And feel the Flesh becoming Word. 

FOR THE NEW YEAR 

The stars wheel past the windows 
Like flocks of winter sparrows; 
The bell clangs out the hours, 
And frost sparkles like stars, 
And the wind blows up the dawn 
With spring behind it and rain 
And the spikes of daffodils 
And June on fire in the hills. 
The apples crowd the bough 
Beneath the frosty Plough, 
And autumn snow is blown 
White as a harvest moon 
On currant and raspberry cane, 
And the wild ganders fly 
Nightly across the sky. 
The seasons flit like linnets, 
And years whirl past like planets, 

162 



NORMAN NICHOLSON 

And the earth's orbit mars 
The changeless map of stars. 
The splintered light which now 
Gently probes my eye 
Is of a star that burned 
When the Scots fired the land, 
When the Norsemen robbed the dales 
And hacked their names on the fells, 
Or when the iceberg lakes 
Elbowed among the rocks 
And carried the Devil's stone 
To the hill above the town, 
Where through my dormer bay 
Drizzles the Milky Way. 



COCKLEY MOOR, DOCKRAY, PENRITH 

Outside, the cubist fells are drawn again 
Beneath the light that speaks ex tempore; 
The fur of bracken thickens in the rain 
And wrinkles shift upon the scurfy scree. 

Inside, like tiles the poet's pleasures lie, 
Squares laid on circle, circle laid on square, 
And pencilled angles of eternity 
Are calculated on the doubled stair. 

Outside, the curlew gargles through the mist, 
The mountain pansies shut up shop and fade, 
The wheatear chisels with his crystal fist, 
And day on day like stone on stone is laid. 

163 



NORMAN NICHOLSON 

Inside, are cows on canvas, painted bloom 
Fresh as a girl's thin fingers burst to flower, 
Bright leaves that do not fall, but fence the room 
With the arrested growth of a June hour. 

The curving cloud embellishes the sky, 
The geometric rain slants to the corn; 
Inside, a man remembers he must die, 
Outside, a stone forgets that it was born. 



THE PREACHERS 

The Lord God smiled 
At the mild words 

As He heard St. Francis 
Preach to the birds. 

Preach of a tree 

With berries on, 
That a woman ate 

And gave to a man; 

The juice was sweet 

But tart the core, 
No herb in field 

Their gripes could cure; 

But another tree 
Grew redder fruit, 

And there God grafted 
The antidote. 

164 



NORMAN NICHOLSON 

Sparrow and starling, 

Jackdaw and rook 
Perched on slates 

And chimney stack. 

Tits trapezed 

Upon the spouts, 
Starlings dropped lime 

Like marguerites. 

They sang to the saint 
With scornful beak: 

"The berries give us 
No bellyache. 

"But the pips split 
And sprout in man, 

And through the thigh 
The roots grow down." 

The Lord God laughed 

At the wild fancies 
As He heard the birds 

Preach to St. Francis. 



CLEATOR MOOR 

From one shaft at Cleator Moor 
They mined for coal and iron ore. 
This harvest below ground could show 
Black and red currants on one tree. 

165 



NORMAN NICHOLSON 

In furnaces they burnt the coal, 
The ore was smelted into steel, 
And railway lines from end to end 
Corseted the bulging land. 

Pylons sprouted on the fells, 

Stakes were driven in like nails, 

And the ploughed fields of Devonshire 

Were sliced with the steel of Cleator Moor. 

The land waxed fat and greedy too, 
It would not share the fruits it grew, 
And coal and ore, as sloe and plum, 
Lay black and red for jamming time. 

The .pylons rusted on the fells, 
The gutters leaked beside the walls, 
And women searched the ebb-tide tracks 
For knobs of coal or broken sticks. 

But now the pits are wick with men, 
Digging like dogs dig for a bone: 
For food and life we dig the earth 
In Cleator Moor they dig for death. 

Every waggon of cold coal 
Is fire to drive a turbine wheel; 
Every knuckle of soft ore 
A bullet in a soldier's ear. 

The miner at the rockface stands, 
With his segged and bleeding hands 
Heaps on his head the fiery coal, 
And feels the iron in his soul. 

1 66 



NORMAN NICHOLSON 

CAROL 

Mary laid her Child among 
The bracken-fronds of night 

And by the glimmer round His head 
All the barn was lit. 

Mary held her Child above 

The miry, frozen farm 
And by the fire within His limbs 

The resting roots were warm. 

Mary hid her Child between 

Hillocks of hard sand 
By singing water in His veins 

Grass sprang from the ground. 

Mary nursed her Child beside 

The gardens of a grave 
And by the death within His bones 

The dead became alive. 



F. T. Prince 

AT A PARADE 

We watch the only eagles in the world, 

How under the crimson flags they have unfurled 

They ruffle in furs and plumes, a rod 

Bear or a brazen bonnet nod, 

And at their side 

Under embroidered sashes long swords, ride 

167 



F. T. PRINCE 

Horses dancing under arms 

And bosom-friends to their alarms: 

Till with those bugles blowing 

The space before the wetly-glowing 

Low-lying palace filled up with that crowd, 

Your heart and my heart seem to cry aloud. 

And standing together and watching, you and I 

Have thrown our hearts like caps into the sky. 

For as I serve you, so I find 

And martialize 

Luxurious lucid mind and eyes 

To celebrate the moving world. 

And though a madness is unfurled, 

Though rage and greed would be at blows 

And Europe's noisier than a bawdy-house, 

What else can I be good for but to praise 

And to defend the world, even in these days? 

And the soldier is also only a kind of tool 

And may be dissolute, foul-mouthed or a fool, 

Yet by that animal expense 

Bodily brilliance, insolence 

It seems that he 

May gain peculiar humility. 

Therefore we too must be bold 

And say these gild the field they hold 

Though serving anything 

Commended by a criminal century or king 

They cover their breasts and shoulders with bright rills 

Of glory. It lies in pools about the horses' heels. 



168 



F. T. PRINCE 

Each is the incorruptible masculine 

And each remains, though dipped in blood and sin 

The lion coloured like a lady 

And riding out at dawn is ready 

And understands 

Why all rewards are wrung out of his hands 

Why he dies and knows alone 

The order of what was to be done: 

I therefore seize those manners, 

And moving with that music under banners 

I have preserved the pieties that were used 

And all the gilded tissues lost, unloosed. 



Kathleen Raine 

THE CRYSTAL SKULL 
I 

At the focus of thought there is no face, 

the focus of the sun is in crystal with no shadow. 

Death of the victim is the power of the god. 

Out of the eyes is the focus of love, 

the face of love is the sun, that all see, 

the skull of the victim is the temple of sight. 

The eyes of the victim are the crystal of divination. 

Sun clears the colours of life. 

The crystal of the skull is the work of the sun. 



169 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

The stone of my destruction casts no shadow. 

The sun kills perfectly with the stroke of noon. 

The clarity of the crystal is the atonement of the god. 

The perfection of man is the pride of death, 
the crystal skull is the perpetuity of life. 
The power of the god is the taking of love. 

The perfection of light is the destruction of the world,, 
death and love turn the faces of day and night. 
The illumination of the skull is the joy of the god. 

II 

All that will be remembered 

Is a fire 

Rising up to God. 
The snow on my love's shoulders 

Will melt in air 

Like a rose fading into night 
All that will remain 

Is the fire 

That kindled the heart. 

Our lips were the sun setting on snow, 

A cloud 

By day and fire by night. 
(All that will be remembered 

Is snow 

Falling on a star) 
Now suns are like desire, 

And snow like death 

And eyes the source of light 

170 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

But all that will be remembered 
Is love 
Kindling the night. 

Love was in the beginning the desire 

That made a star, 

Made man. 
All that will remain 

Is desire 

Returning to God, 
All that will be remembered 

Is that the sun 

Became the heart. 

All that will remain 

Is man 

Consumed by the sun, 
All that will remain 

Is what the heart remembers 

Of die sun. 
All that will remain 

Is the love 

That burns away the sun. 

(July /5>//>, 1941) 



"TU NON SE' IN TERRA, SI COME TU CREDI..." 

Not upon earth, as you suppose 
tower these rocks that turn the wind, 
for on their summits angels stand. 



171 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

Nor from the earth these waters rise 
to quench not thirst, but ecstasy 
the waterfall leaps from the sky. 

Those nameless clouds that storm and swirl 

about the mountain are the veil 

that from these sightless eyes shall fall 

when senses faint into the ground, 
and time and place go down the wind. 



ENVOI 

Take of me what is not my own, 
my love, my beauty, and my poem 
the pain is mine, and mine alone. 

See how against the weight in the bone 
the hawk hangs perfect in mid-air 
the blood pays dear to raise it there, 
the moment, not the bird, divine. 

And sec the peaceful trees extend 
their myriad leaves in leisured dance 
they bear the weight of sky and cloud 
upon the fountain of their veins. 

In rose with petals soft as air 
I bind for you the tides and fire 
the death that lives within the flotoer, 
oh gladly, love, for you I bear! 

172 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

STILL LIFE 

The hour of sight 
Flower of light 
And unendurable 
Wings of flight 

All turn to fossil 
Turn to stone 
The delicate shell 
And the mighty bone. 

The blood the nerves 

The trace of thought 

That cross the night 

From the source of the world. 

The play of light 
In the wake of the sun 
Is suddenly still 
Like a frozen stream 

Suddenly still 
Bird, flower and shell 
That love has created, 
Life-shaped and perfected, 
So to remain. 

LOVE POEM 

Yours is the face that the earth turns to me. 
Continuous beyond its human features lie 
The mountain forms that rest against the sky. 

173 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

With your eyes, the reflecting rainbow, the sun's light 
Sees me; forest and flowers, bird and beast 
Know and hold me for ever in the world's thought, 
Creation's deep untroubled retrospect. 

When your hand touches mine, it is the earth 

That takes me the deep grass, 

And rocks and rivers; the green graves, 

And children still unborn, and ancestors, 

In love passed down from hand to hand from God. 

Your love comes from the creation of the world, 

From those paternal fingers, streaming through the clouds 

That break with light the surface of the sea. 

Here, where I trace your body with my hand, 
Loves' presence has no end; 

For these, your arms that hold me, are the world's. 
In us, the continents, clouds and oceans meet 
Our arbitrary selves, extensive with the night, 
Lost, in the heart's worship, and the body's sleep. 

LONDON NIGHT 

The sky above London 

Last night over my house shone with two kinds of being 

And poised between the external and the symbol 

I saw Christ's imagined resurrection 

Arrayed behind the real September moonlight. 

My heart loved and was still, 

And to the verge of Heaven so near I stood 

That all my lifetime was made less than a moment 

For no such Now comes ever with the years' flight. 

174 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

Not in the grave where we laid our love shall we find him; 
The adored one for whom the moonlight was a shroud 
Has laid aside the raiment of clouds on the roofs of the houses 
Elsewhere and far He died, but here, oh at heart, He rises! 

(September 22nd> 194?) 



ON LEAVING ULLSWATER 

I 

The air is full of a farewell 

deserted by the silver lake 

lies the wild world, overturned. 

Cities rise where mountains fell, 

the furnace where the phoenix burned. 

II 

The lake is in my dream, 

the tree is in my blood, 

die past is in my bones, 

the flowers of the wood 

I love with long past loves. 

I fear with many deaths 

the presence of the night, 

and in my memory read 

the scripture of the leaves 

Only myself how strange 
to the strange present come! 



175 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

NIGHT IN MARTINDALE 

Not in the rustle of water, the air's noise, 

the roar of storm, the ominous birds, the cries 

the angel here speaks with a human note. 

Stone into man must grow, the human word 
carved by our whispers in the passing air 

is the authentic utterance of cloud, 

the speech of flowing water, blowing wind, 

of silver moon and stunted juniper. 

Words say, waters flow, 

rocks weather, ferns wither, winds blow, times go, 

I write the sun's Love, and the stars' No. 

IN TIME 

The beautiful rain falls, the unheeded angel 
lies in the street, spreadeagled under the footfall 
that from the divine face wears away the smile 

whose tears run in the gutter, melting where 
the stationary cars wait for departure; 
the letter that says Ave is passed over 

for at the ever-present place the angel waits, 
passes through walls and hoardings, in dark porches 
his face, wounded by us, for us and over us watches. 



176 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

FOR POSTERITY 

(On a drawing of Patterdale in 1830) 

All life, tumbled together in a storm 

And the crags stand out clear in the lightning. 

The wind, like a bolting horse, pounds down the valley, 

The sheep, like vegetation, draw to earth, 

And trees, like animate things, tear at their roots and groan. 

That was in 1830. That storm long since was over. 
So, my tempestuous love, closed in a quiet book, 
And in a quiet grave, disturbs no heart but yours, 
Reader, stretched on the summer grass 
Waiting for tea-time, and shadows growing longer. 

I94J- 

REQUIEM 

Past love, past sorrow, lies this darkness 

Where, your face hidden for ever, you are at heart, 

Lost from the world yet known to this blind prayer. 

Light that divides 
Sun from leaf, 
Leaf from water, 
Water from shadow, 
Stone from eye, 
Eye from mountain, 
The lover from the rose, 
Divided us. 



177 



KATHLEEN RAINE 

Da} made us apart, 
Lent scope to hate, 
To desire, distances, 
To despair, perspectives, 
To fancies, colour, 
To thought, a maze, 
To art, semblances. 
Light breaks the heart 
And shatters love. 

But in this dark 
Over all dark 
Interior dark, 
The house of the heart, 
Dkrkness of God, 
Blindness of love 
Whose eyes have seen 
In the sun a cloud 
On the perfect face 

There is a place 

Where living and dead 

In love are one. 

Your sleep is in my heart, 

My dark your rest, 

My prayer your peace, 

Your death my passion. 

April 4t 



I 7 8 



Henry Reed 



MORNING 

Look, my love, on the wall, and here, at this Eastern picture. 
How still its scene, and neither of sleep nor waking: 
No shadow falls from the tree or the golden mountain, 
The boats on the glassy lake have no reflection, 
No echo would come if you blew a horn in those valleys. 

And look away, and move. Or speak, or sing: 
And voices of the past murmur among your words, 
Under your glance my dead selves quicken and stir, 
And a thousand shadows attend you where you go. 

That is your movement. There is a golden stillness, 

Soundless and fathomless, and far beyond it; 

When brow on brow, or mouth to mouth assembled, 

We lie in the calm of morning. And there, outside us, 

The sun moves on, the boat jogs on the lake, 

The huntsman calls. 

And we lie here, our orient peace awaking, 

No echo, and no shadow, and no reflection. 

THE DOOR AND THE WINDOW 

My love, you are timely come, let me lie by your heart. 
For waking in the dark this morning, I woke to that mystery, 
Which we can all wake to, at some dark time or another: 
Waking to find the room not as I thought it was, 
But the window further away, and the door in another di- 
rection. 

179 



HENRY REED 

This was not home, and you were far away 
And I woke sick, and held by another passion, 
In the icy grip of a dead, tormenting flame, 
Consumed by the night, watched by the door and the 

window. 
On a bed of stone, waiting for the day to bring you. 

The door has opened: and can you, at last beside me, 
Drive under the day that frozen and faithless darkness, 
With its unseen torments flickering, which neither 
The dearest look nor the longest kiss assuages? 



Keidrych Rhys 

THE GOOD SHEPHERD 

(translated from his own Welsh) 

Go and spy on the sheep 

My father would say 

Before I went to school every morning 

Today snow covers the ground 

On field the sun shone 

And the fat sheep cut the trodden patches 

I counted them 

I looked at their tails! 

I found one new lamb and put him to suck 

In the zig-zag shelter 

Of the hedge by the crooked cart-road. 

180 



KEIDRYCH RHYS 

I smoked a cigarette 

That the hired man gave me 

There was a lovely slide across the river 

I scared the sheep 

I bulged after 

Through the gap to Old David's cow pasture 

Teacher said I never polish my shoes. 



THIRD AND FOURTH 

When stone-hewn storms knock against our cottage, 

What shall we do, my love, my love. 

Prove the aspirations of the fourth generation? 

Soft buckets from the ivied coalhouse 

Out of a too-dear two hundred weights ration 

Sitting dusty in seven-day cindcry contemplation. 

Sprawl on peasant divans on the gingham-checked cushions 
darling 

It's war. How shall I feed my unborn baby 
Now I'm unemployed and have no money? 
Breast feed him? we're a civilized country. 

Lord be good raise a fire in both rooms 
Light up the books and rugs the pots and pans 
But what if the rain-drops seep in at windowsill 
And the wallpaper is damp and dripping? 

Is it our nine-days Wind-baby howling outside the house- 
walls ? 
Now when the garden is old-audacious with snows 

181 



KEIDRYCH RHYS 

Must we put up black-outs against heaven's carpentry? 
Prove the aspirations of the fourth generation? 

What shall we do, what shall we do? 

The retired tavern-keeper is seated alongside our primitive 

villagers under idiot oak-beams 

Dismisses the tainted ravings of our poacher-hating farmer 
With the double-barrelled B. S. A. shotgun 
But should poets half-use binoculars? 

Shall I phone for the country G. P., have first-aid ready. 
The hot water boiling, a towel. Everything sanitary. 
Say: I fear a miscarriage: not diet, worry. 

Out of the window, a stack, the cowshed, the smithy. 

Ssh! Are you quite happy? 

You miss me when I go out of the room. 

Announcers and Messerschmitts exhale over our Welsh 

earthsmells 
Can't bale out in an Irving: Haw-Haw poisoning the wells. 

Dusk's hushed figures slink in the doorways of darkness 
They're carrying jugs of water, they're breathless 
The pink limed cottages cluster mysterious 
Around the four-cornered tower's stillness. 

Cast down by hollow suffering I recall 

Children in the shade of the Old Chapel wall 

The schoolmaster buying a packet of fags at "the Shop" 

Kisses on nape of neck pass for a test of heart 

182 



KEIDRYCH RHYS 

In a time of cynicism and rum 

So many, so many are longing for husbands to come 

Up and squeeze them to their hearts 

But here your dear warm afternoon body remains 
Proud against pillowslips cross-colour pains 
Three wardrobe gargoyles stare at where 
Two golden-winged cupids look down from above in their 
rare profusion of hair 

Look down upon what cut our bed of love 
My love my love what is to be done 

darling shall we curse the Hand above 
The Hound of Heaven, the bitchy Joy master, 

And the cheap carved bum-dimpled Bacchus, be tried 
By all the fertile nightmares of felicity which cried and lied: 
Be interrupted in the flame of midnight by demands 
Imagination hearkening along bumpy catcall lands 
. . . And once for months, Oh absent months with tears 
Quick tears, I sickened for your off-blue whiteness! 
No. Step out of shoulder-straps marriage resurrects holiness? 
Who saddens us now with bellowing . . . ties also the 
clovergift? 

Does the storm abate its puffed-cheek breath, then start again? 

Who says: 

There is a spot moving somewhere in air? 

Is there no-one no-one no-one to prove, prove aspiration 
Prove the aspirations of the fourth generation 

1 ponder too long the X-ray child in his mother's womb. 

183 



Anne Ridler 



A DREAM OBSERVED 

Out from his bed the breaking seas 

By waking eyes unseen 
Now fall, aquatic creatures whirl 

And he whirls through the ambient green. 

The sea lion and the scolopendra 

Lolling in sleep he sees 
Strange in their ways, and the swift changes 

Their landscape makes, from shells to trees. 

Down English lanes a camel walks, 

Or untrammelled flies. 
But I, wakeful and watching, see 

How chilly out of the clothes he lies. 

Easy an act to cover him warm: 

Such a lover's small success 
Like the heaped mind so humble in sleep 

But points our actual powerlessness. 

Monsters in dreams he sees, yet lies 

At peace in his curling bed; 
Blessings that outdo all distress 

Implicit in his sleeping head. 



184 



ANNE RIDLER 

BEFORE SLEEP 

Now that you lie 

In London afar, 
And may sleep longer 

Though lonelier, 
For I shall not wake you 

With a nightmare, 
Heaven plant such peace in us 
As if no parting stretched between us. 

The world revolves 

And is evil; 
God's image is 

Wormeat'en by the devil; 
May the good angel 

Have no rival 

By our beds, and we lie curled 
At the sound unmoving centre of the world. 

In our good nights 

When we were together, 
We made, in that stillness 

Where we loved each other, 
A new being, of both 

Yet above either: 

So, when I cannot share your sleep, 
Into this being, half yours, I creep. 

FOR A CHILD EXPECTED 

Lovers whose lifted hands are candles in winter, 
Whose gentle ways like streams in the easy summer, 
Lying together 

185 



ANNE RIDLER 

For secret setting of a child, love what they do, 
Thinking they make that candle immortal, those streams 

forever flow, 
And yet do better than they know. 

So the first flutter of a baby felt in the womb, 
Its little signal and promise of riches to come, 
Is taken in its father's name; 
Its life is the body of his love, like his caress, 
First delicate and strange, that daily use 
Makes dearer and priceless. 

Our baby was to be the living sign of our joy, 

Restore to each the other's lost infancy; 

To a painter's pillaging eye 

Poet's coiled hearing, add the heart we might earn 

By the help of love; all that our passion would yield 

We put to planning our child. 

The world flowed in; whatever we liked we took: 
For its hair, the gold curls of the November oak 
We saw on our walk; 

Snowberries that make a Milky Way in the wood 
For its tender hands; calm screen of the frozen flood 
For our care of its childhood. 

But the birth of a child is an uncontrollable glory; 

Cat's cradle of hopes will hold no living baby, 

Long though it lay quietly. 

And when our baby stirs and struggles to be born 

It compels humility: what we began 

Is now its own. 

186 



ANNE RIDLER 

For as the sun that shines through glass 

So Jesus in His Mother was. 

Therefore every human creature, 

Since it shares in His nature, 

In candle gold passion or white 

Sharp star should show its own way of light. 

May no parental dread or dream 

Darken our darling's early beam: 

May she grow to her right powers 

Unperturbed by passion of ours. 

BUNHILL'S FIELDS 

Under cool trees the City tombs 

extend, and nearer lie 
stones above Blake's and Bunyan's bones 

to Vivian's working days than I. 

Since he is gentle, wild and good 

as you were, peaceable Shades, 
there may he go within your care 

as in my heart his love resides. 

Such a care as held unharmed 

the tree within the fire; 
spread wings like those that led 

Tobias in the dangerous shire. 

And if I fear his death too much, 

let me not learn more faith 
by sad trial of what I dread, 

nor grieve him by my own death. 

187 



ANNE RIDLER 

For our faith is one which may 

convert but not console: 
we shall not, except by our own will, 

part for ever in the gape of hell. 

EDLESBOROUGH 

Beyond the Chiltern coast, this church: 

A lighthouse in dry seas of standing corn. 

Bees hive in the tower; the outer stone 

Pared and frittered in sunlight, flakes with the years: 

Clunch crumbles, but silence, exaltation, endures. 

The brass-robed Rector stretched on his tomb endures. 
Within, we go upon the dragon and the bat, 
Walk above the world, without, 
Uplifted among grey lavender, beech and sycamore, 
Shades of the sea-born chalk, indelible and austere. 

If we see history from this hill 

It is upon its own conditions, here 

Each season swirls and eddies the circle of a year 

Round the spectator church, and human eyes 

Take, on its plinth, a long focus of centuries. 

We seem like gods on any hill. 

From here all toil resembles rest, and yet 

Unlike a god we feel ourselves shut out. 

Surely that farm in a carved blue curve of trees 

So still with all its creatures, holds the unattainable peace? 

It is Time's camouflage deceives us. 

There it extends like space: whatever moves 

188 



ANNE RIDLER 

(A horse to drink, a reaper to stack the sheaves) 
Displays the movement in its whole succession, 
Not a change of terms, only a changed relation. 

Deceit or truth? The dead possess the hill 

In battlements of Totternhoe or slate; 

The view is ours, the range and ache of sight. 

If Time serves: in a common space unrolls 

This Resurrection field, with sheaves in glory like risen souls. 



POEM FOR A CHRISTMAS BROADCAST 
Woman s Voice 

Perhaps you find the angel most improbable? 

It spoke to men asleep, their minds ajar 

For once to admit the entrance of a stranger. 

Few have heard voices, but all have made a journey: 

The mind moves, desiring dedication, 

Desiring to lay its gifts, as a dog its bone, 

At the feet of the first creation. "Take it or leave it" 

Says pride, "You made it; You must bear the blame." 

But secretly the heart "O make it good." 

"Either God acts in vain, or this is God." 

1st King 

Melchior brings gold. O teach me to give, 

For this was infancy's first love: 

Its first possession; its adult passion 

O new creation 

Take my treasure and make me free. 

189 



ANNE RIDLER 

2nd King 

Caspar, incense: all that is strange, 
Oblique, projected beyond the range 
Of the First Person. Such mediation 
O new creation 
Take, that we dare the direct sight. 

yd, King 

Death is a strong wish. Balthasar 
Brings his desire in a gift of myrrh ; 
Seeking perfection in pain and cessation 
O new creation 
Die for me, make me desire to live. 

All Three 

Mary, who nourished glory on human kindness 
By springs of power hidden from the mind, 
Here is our small self-knowledge, now 
Make it acceptable, or teach us how. 

Mary 

He will accept it, never fear, 

For his audacity is my despair. 

O do not give what he should not bear. 

His boldness is beyond belief, 

His threats, his lightnings, his short grief. 

Is it divine or mortal confidence? 

Mortal ignorance, godlike innocence. 

Brazen, he takes love as a right; 

190 



ANNE RIDLliR 

He knows to demand is to give delight. 
Youngling, here we offer love 
What have we to offer but love? 
And what is our love? Greed and despair. 
O do not take what you should not bear, 
Or tainted love by true convince: 
Let us not harm you, helpless Prince. 
Sin is the chance of mercy; 
Then even sin contrives your greater glory. 

THE SPRING EQUINOX 

Now is the pause between asleep and awake: 

Two seasons take 

A colour and quality each from each as yet. 

The new stage-set 

Spandril, column and fan of spring is raised against the 

winter backdrop 
Murrey and soft; 
Now aloft 

The sun swings on the equinoctial line. 
Few flowers yet shine: 
The hellebore hangs a clear green bell and opulent leaves 

above dark mould; 
The light is cold 

In arum leaves, and a primrose flickers 
Here and there; the first cool bird-song flickers in the thicket. 
Clouds arc pale as the pollen from sallows; 
March fallows are white with lime like frost. 

This is the pause between asleep and awake: 
The pause of contemplation and of peice, 

191 



ANNE RIDLER 

Before the earth must teem and the heart ache. 

This is the child's pause, before it sees 

That the choice of one way has denied the other ; 

Must choose the either, or both, of to care and not to care; 

Before the light or darkness shall discover 

Irreparable loss; before it must take 

Blame for the creature caught in the necessary snare: 

Receiving a profit, before it holds a snare. 



Lynette Roberts 

POEM FROM LLANYBRI 

If you come my way that is ... 
Between now and then, I will offer you 
A fist full of rock cress fresh from the bank 
The valley tips of garlic red with dew 
Cooler than shallots, a breath you can swank 

In the village when you come. At noon-day 

I will offer you a choice bowl of cawl 

Served with a "lover's" spoon and a chopped spray 

Of leeks or savori fach, not used now, 

In the old way you'll understand. The din 
Of children singing through the eyelet sheds 
Ringing 'smith hoops, chasing the butt of hens; 
Or I can offer you Cwmcelyn spread 

With quartz stones from the wild scratchings of men: 
You will have to go carefully with clogs 
Or thick shoes for it's treacherous the fen, 
The East and West Marshes also have bogs. 

192, 



LYNETTE ROBERTS 

Then I'll do the lights, fill the lamp with oil, 
Get coal from the shed, water from the well; 
Pluck and draw pigeon, with crop of green foil 
This your good supper from the lime-tree fell. 

A sit by the hearth with blue flames rising, 
No talk. Just a stare at "Time" gathering 
Healed thoughts, pool insight, like swan sailing 
Peace and sound around the home, offering 

You a night's rest and my day's energy. 
You must come start this pilgrimage 
Can you come? send an ode or elegy 
In the old way and raise our heritage. 

THE SHADOW REMAINS 

To speak of everyday things with ease 
And arrest the mind to a simpler world 
Where living tables arc stripped of a cloth; 

Of wood on which I washed, sat at peace: 
Cooked duck, shot on an evening in peacock cold: 
Studied awhile: wrote: baked bread for us both. 

But here by the hearth with leisured grace 

I prefer to speak of the vulgar clock that drips 

With the falling of rain: woodbine tips, and yarrow 

Spills, lamp, packet of salt, and twopence of mace 
That sit on the shelf edged with a metal strip, 
And below, brazier fire that burns our sorrow, 

Dries weeping socks above on the rack: that knew 
Two angels pinned to the wall again two. 

193 



LYNETTE ROBERTS 

LOW TIDE 

Every waiting moment is a fold of sorrow 

Pierced within the heart. 

Pieces of mind get torn off emotionally 

In large wisps. 

Like a waif I lie, stillbound to action: 

Each waiting hour I stare and see not, 

Hum and hear not, nor care I how long 

The lode mood lasts. 

My eyes are raw and wide apart 

Stiffened by the salt bar 

That separates us. 

You so far; 

I at ease at the hearth 

Glowing for a welcome 

From your heart. 

Each beating moment crosses my dream 

So that wise things cannot pass 

As we had planned. 

Woe for all of us : supporting those 

Who like us fail to steel their hearts, 

But keep them wound in clocktight rooms, 

111 found. Unused. Obsessed by time. 

Each beating hour 

Rings false. 



194 



W. R. Rodgers 



THE SWAN 

Bottomed by tugging combs of water 
The slow and loath swan slews and looks 
Coldly down through chutes of stilled chatter 
Upon the shadows in flight among the stones. 

Into abashed confusions of ooze 

It dips, and from the muddy fume 

The filtered and flute like fishes rise 

Endlessly up through all their octaves of gloom. 

To where the roofed swan suavely swings 
Without qualm on the footling wave 
That laves it on, with elbowing wings swelled 
Wide under its eyes' held look and architrave. 

Slow slow it slides, as if not to chafe 
The even sleeve of its approach 
Stretched stiff and oval in front of it, 
Siphoning it on, selfless, silent and safe. 

Jonquil-long its neck adjudicates 

Its body's course, aloof and cool 

It cons the nonchalant face of air 

With its incurious and dispassionate stare. 

On that grey lake frilled round with scuffUiigs 
Of foam, and milled with muttering, 



W. R. RODGERS 

I saw, lingering late and lightless, 

A single swan swinging, sleek like a sequin. 

Negligently bright, wide wings pinned back, 
It mooned on the moving water, 
And not all the close and gartering dark 
Or levering winds could lift or flatter 

That small and dimming image into flight, 

Far from shore and free from foresight, 

Coiled in its own indifferent mood 

It held the heavens, shores, waters and all their brood. 

AUTUMN 

Going out, those bold days, 
O what a gallery-roar of trees and gale- wash 
Of leaves abashed me, what a shudder and shore 
Of bladdery shadows dashed on windows ablaze, 
What a hedge-shingle seething, what vast lime-splashes 
Of light clouting the land. Never had I seen 
Such a running-over of clover, such tissue sheets 
Of cloud poled asunder by sun, such plunges 
And thunder-load of fun. Trees, grasses, wings all 
On a hone of wind sluiced and sleeked one way, 
Smooth and close as the pile of a pony's coat, 
But, in a moment, smoke-slewed, glared, squinted back 
And up like sticking bones shockingly unkinncd. 
How my heart, like all these, was silk and thistle 
By turns, how it fitted and followed the stiff lifts 
And easy falls of them, or, like that bird above me, 
No longer crushing against cushions of air, 

196 



W. R. RODGERS 

Hung in happy apathy, waiting for wind-rifts. 

Who could not dance on, and be dandled by such a day 

Of loud expansion? when every flash and shout 

Took the hook of the mind and reeled out the eye's line 

Into whips and whirl-spools of light, when every ash-shoot 

shone 

Like a weal and was gone in the gloom of the wind's lash. 
Who could not feel it? the uplift and total substraction 
Of breath as, now bellying, now in abeyance, 
The gust poured up from the camp's throat below, bringing 
Garbled reports of guns and bugle-notes, 
But, gullible, then drank them back again. 
And I, dryly shuffling through the scurf of leaves 
Fleeing like scuffled toast, was host to all these things; 
In me were the spoon-swoops of wind, in me too 
The rooks dying and settling like tea-leaves over the trees; 
And, rumbling on rims of rhyme, mine were the haycarts 

home-creeping 
Leaving the rough hedge-cheeks long-strawed and streaked 

with their weeping. 

LENT 

Mary Magdalene, that easy woman, 

Saw, from the shore, the seas 

Beat against the hard stone of Lent; 

Crying "Weep, seas, weep 

For yourselves that cannot dent me more." 

"O more than all these, more crabbed than all stones, 
And cold, make me, who once 
Could leap like water, Lord. Take me 

197 



W. R. RODGERS 

As one who owes now 

Nothing to what she was. Ah, naked. 

My waves of scent, my petticoats of foam, 

Put from me and rebut; 

Disown. And that salt lust stave off 

That slavered me O 

Let it whiten in grief against the stones 

And outer reefs of me. Utterly doff, 

Nor leave the lightest veil 

Of feeling to heave or soften. 

Nothing cares this heart 

What hardness crates it now or coffins. 

Over the balconies of these curved breasts 

I'll no more peep to see 

The light procession of my loves 

Surf-riding in to me 

Who now have eyes and alcove, Lord, for Thee." 

"Room, Mary," said He, "ah make room for me 

Who am come so cold now 

To my tomb/* So, on Good Friday, 

Under a frosty moon 

They carried Him and laid Him in her womb. 

A grave and icy mask her heart wore twice, 

But on the third day it thawed, 

And only a stone's-throw away 

Mary saw her God. 

Did you hear me? Mary saw her God. 

198 



W. R. RODGERS 

Dance, Mary Magdalene, dance, dance and sing, 

For unto you is born 

This day a King. "Lady/* said He, 

"To you who relent 

I bring back the petticoat and the bottle of scent/ 1 

NEITHER HERE NOR THERE 

In that land all is, and nothing's Ought; 
No owners or notices, only birds; 
No walls anywhere, only lean wire of words 
Worming brokenly out from eaten thought; 
No oats growing, only ankle-lace grass 
Easing and not resenting the feet that pass; 
No enormous beasts, only names of them; 
No bones made, bans laid, or boons expected, 
No contracts, entails, hereditaments, 
Anything at all that might tie or hem. 

In that land all's lackadaisical; 

No lakes of coddled spawn, and no locked ponds 

Of settled purpose, no netted fishes; 

But only inkling streams and running fronds 

Fritillaricd with dreams, weedy with wishes; 

Nor arrogant talk is heard, haggling phrase, 

But undertones, and hcsitance, and haze; 

On clear days mountains of meaning arc seen 

Humped high on the horizon; no one goes 

To con their meaning, no one cares or knows. 

In that land all's flat, indifferent; there 

Is neither springing house nor hanging tent, 

No aims are entertained, and nb thing is meant, 

199 



W. R. RODGERS 

For there are no ends and no trends, no roads, 

Only follow your nose to anywhere. 

No one is born there, no one stays or dies, 

For it is a timeless land, it lies 

Between the act and the attrition, it 

Marks off bound from rebound, make from break, tit 

From tat, also to-day from to-morrow. 

No Cause there comes to term, but each departs 

Elsewhere to whelp its deeds, expel its darts; 

There are no homecomings, of course, no good-byes 

In that land, neither yearning nor scorning, 

Though at night there is the smell of morning. 

SONG FOR WAR 

Put away the flutes 

Into their careful clefts, 

And cut the violins that like ivy climb 

Flat to their very roots; 

All that a subtler time 

Allowed us we must now commute 

To commoner modes; for here come 

The hieratic trumpet and demotic drum 

Fall in and follow, let the beat 

Hyphenate your halved feet, 

Feel its imbricating rhythm 

Obliterating every schism 

And split through which you might espy 

The idiosyncratic I; 

Let the assumptive trumpets pace 

And pattern out the sounding space 

Into stillnesses that numb 

200 



W. R. RODGERS 

By iteration and by sum, 

Till the walls of will fall down 

Round the seven-times-circled town 

Of your mind, and not a jot 

Is left of fore or after thought. 

O slowly go and closely follow, 

Toe to heel and hill to hollow, 

All the ditto feet that lead 

You onward in a millipede 

To the battle where, as one, 

A hundred thousand tip and run. 

But when the burning sun again 

Behind the hill 

Slides down and leaves the separate slain 

Frosted and still, 

Then over the rued fields that drum and trumpet fled 

Slow musics rise like mists and wreathe their requiem 

Round the bruised rccds, and coldy mounts the moon 

Of thought, and rules among the quorum of the dead. 

SONG FOR PEACE 

See, the ruthless victor comes 

With tooth of trumpet, claw of drums, 

Have ready on his route 

A fanfare of strumpets and a salute 

Of fifty bums; 

This, this will be his randy-vous 

With destiny; have handy, too, 

The boostings of applause 

To blow his fuses and effect a pause. 

And you, you tuneless walls, 

201 



W. R. RODGERS 

Open wide the windows of your huff 

And hang out every hoarse hurrah, 

Brighten your doorways, do your stuff, 

And draw him from his coup d'etat; 

Bring out the dancing flute 

And the frivolous fiddle, 

Merry-go-round and inveigle 

Him into the middle, 

Until his sidelong glances scrape 

Across the feminine violin-shape, 

And his obedient battalions 

Caper on curtseying feet like stallions. 

Yet if this fails, fails to move 

Him from his humdrummed groove, 

And if the hammered round 

Of order and routine 

Allows no new, no extraordinary sound 

To dent, to enter, or to intervene; 

If in the fixed receipt 

Of war's auricular beat 

He marches on unvarying and complete, 

Then some disharmony we must devise 

Him to divide against himself and civilise : 

Then let the still small voice 

Connive, contrive 

To enter a caveat against 

Each move by which he would arrive: 

Veto no destination, but instead 

Insert a doubt into his very tread; 

See that his single track of feeling frays 

Into two sudden, different, equal ways; 

202 



W. R. RODGERS 

Between his "I will" and "I ought" 
Cause him to halt and stand in thought; 
Force him to pick and predicate 
Each walking step and waking state; 
Till his one-way-street of going 
Vacillates into to-and-froing, 
And his flowing roundabout 
Of feeling flounders into doubt 
And angular analysis 
Of self and its paralysis. 

At last, at last his listless hand lets fall 

The pulseless drum. 

And the uncertain trumpet asks 

The way to kingdom-come. 

And Peace conies forward now, him to inurn. 

Ring bells, and bawl hooray. 

Empty is war's highway, 

And men to subtler routes and set pursuits return. 

And yet, 

As quavering rings of sound 

Surround the clanged gong, 

Wrinkling on long after and far out, 

In mind we may prolong 

Beyond the body's bound 

The wavering flounces of that martial shout 

That once called all men up and coiled them round 

With rhythm that now is fallen utterly into rout. 

NATIVITY 

His holly hair, his berry eye are here, 
And his chrysanthemum wound, 

203 



W. R. RODGERS 

This Christmas day; by symbols once again 
The Mystery's importuned. 

Hisses the singing kettle of his blood 
Out of his sanguine side, 
Poked by the sibling spear it ebbs and flows 
In a hub-bubble tide 

That dyes the silent room. The gay young god, 
Dog in the manger now, 

Growls in the hearth, and bares old teeth against 
The Ass in us, the Cow. 

There are the portly bottle-loins, and there 
The wine-marks of his birth 
Upon the straw, the biscuit-brittle straw 
Broken by Mary's girth. 

And here, most meek, most eager, and most hushed, 

The angelic agents hover, 

A great prudential company, all come 

To offer him life-cover. 

Comes Sentiment with frozen tears lent 
By Memory, melting sweet, 
Her hothead cries boil over and congeal 
Again at her cold feet. 

And Grief, deep in her crushed and tinfoil wrap, 
Brokenly glares to-day 
Among the ashes and the cruel butt- 
Ends of this Christmas play. 

204 



W. R. RODGERS 

And there's the tapering tree of his descent, 
Hitched toa kingly star, 
Earth is its horizontal, heaven and hell 
Its upright centre-spar. 

The very tree of life, so base, so wide, 
And with such longing fraught, 
Up the step-ladder of our looks it spires 
Into a point of thought. 

In the stark winter of our tinselled pride 
Its frozen growth now stands 
Waiting the fiery gift, the melting dew 
Spangled from heavenly hands. 

Ah look! The bush is candlabraed now 
With yellow and with blue, 
Types of the spirit, sweet and bitter both, 
Opposed but wholly true. 

Outside, like rootless souls the silent trees 
Sail past on trays of mist; 
The miser-icicle on the pane still marks 
The place that Judas kissed. 

His thistle breath still lingers in the air, 
Spiky with eagerness, 
It hovers on the garden, and the grass 
Whitens at his caress. 

Robin with rusty bib no longer can 
Pull out the worm-like nail, 

205 



W. R. RODGERS 

Dumpy with impotence it droops and humps 
Upon the wooden rail. 

And hark! The Herod-angels sing tonight! 

Over the Magi's tents 

Their heartless song drones on through grumbling glooms 

And weeping continents. 

High on his farthing floor the airman moons 

Above the mourning town 

Of Bethlehem; it is his footling root 

And he the flower and crown. 

O Caspar, Melchior, and Balthazcr, 

Come from your caravan 

And tell me where you go, and what new star 

You saw in Teheran: 

And what new man now hurries to be born 
Out of our addled earth, 
And O what silly corner of ourselves 
Will sec the mangy birth. 

Strike, strike the gong of our song till souls take fire, 
Clasp hands and bellow, 

Dance, dance, leap higher and longer, and hug 
Each with its fellow. 

Lord, in this wintry interval we send 
Our indolent regards 

And grey regrets. Make fluent all the pens 
Of all the frozen bards. 

206 



W. R. RODGERS 

Lay the live coal upon their lips that they 
May leap uproariously 

Out of their huff of words, and let the thorns 
Crackle with prophecy. 

Resume, and reimburse the silent wood, 

Elaborate its saps, 

Bid the bare trees blurt into bloom, and fill 

With leaf the hungry gaps, 

And in its head set the heart's singing birds. 



D. S. Savage 

WINTER OFFERING 

All I can offer now is a cracked china jug 

Of water, and, grown with tedious sweat and toil, 

Potatoes from the back-garden clods dug, 

Cut with the blunt spade-edge, clogged with heavy soil. 

I wish 1 could give you apples, grapes and pears, 
I wish I could give you cider and sour wine, 
Hut the orchard has been rank and green for years 
And its fruit won't ripen without sunshine. 

Potatoes cement bone, keep body and soul together, 
Water costs nothing and will do for the present. 
It's difficult enough to be gay in this wretched weather 
Without useless regrets for living like a peasant. 

We'll make no virtue of enforced economy, 
Strike no impressive plaster or tin attitudes. 

207 



D. S. SAVAGE 

Poverty's fixed, archaic physiognomy 

Projects only through masks where nothing else extrudes. 

THE WILD SWAN 

The evening spread its rags of melancholy 

over the marshes where the pylons traced 

a windy track. The air was desolate 

with sorrow unexpressed, and the birds sang 

as though their songs were the faint whispers of wind 

that broke, sighing, upon the singing reeds. 

Wind faltered hesitantly through the viaduct 

that spanned the river, and stilled on the cold surface 

of stone. My mind was hard and sensitive 

as that dark mirror in its loneliness; 

but as my glancing eyes met the still waters 

the lake was splintered by a lacing swan: 

my mood was shattered with its calm explosion. 

FEBRUARY 

Ebbs from soiled fields the last drab vestige of snow, 
Through February's veils the hazy distance looms, 
In sunken woods no melancholy horn is blown, 
Only an invisible process of decay consumes. 

I have sat at this window and watched the day 
Consumed as though its substance were a powdering wood 
In whose grey embers the origin of all decay 
Smopldered, as it patiently smoulders within my blood. 

208 



D. S. SAVAGE 

Rotting vegetation, a leaf like a leather glove, 
A glove or a fleshless hand, of a corpse or a tree; 
Excrement; a dead dog buried in a garden grave; 
I am all these, and all these moulder in me. 

I am the limestone in the cave, the putrefying bone, 
The seashell mashed and splintered by the mechanical surf, 
The green, soft fallen tree-trunk, the crumbling stone, 
The waterlogged carrion under the thatch of turf. 

The odour of mortality rises from the death of the day, 
Earth's subtle chemistry proceeds ; water drips from the boughs ; 
Nourished on black corruption, warmed in the breath of decay 
The seeds of Spring lie swelling in their soaking house. 



SCENARIO 

A door creaks in the house. Outside the window 

rain streams upon the flat, deserted landscape. 

It falls from everlasting to everlasting. 

The earth hungers. Trees spread their gaunt limbs wider. 

"I had a lover, but because of my soul's depravity 

Time soured him like a crust, we were chained like prisoners. 

Now he replenishes the earth, his breast is hollow, 

he is gone from me like a rotten tooth, leaving an aching cavity. 

"I, alone, beneath the groaning rooftree, 

agonize in desperation, and in a crazy fashion 

I am like a wet fag-end left smouldering 

on the edge of a fouled sink, rank with my wry passion." 

209 



D. S. SAVAGE 

The wind rattles the windows. In a dirty saucer 
mix ash and tea-stains. The woman wanders. 
Cinematic memory unwinds the defunct weathers 
of a hundred wasted seasons, but supplies no answer. 

SEPARATION 

All day I have been completely alone, and now the night 
Descends, swathing in shadow and swaddling all, 
And all but a smother and blur is bandaged from sight, 
Blots and blotches of shadow clotting on ceiling and wall. 

I lift the glass chimney, and light the oil-lamp's wick, 
The quick lick of the flame flickers, and shadows distend, 
The elongations of fingers sprawl on the wall, and the tick 
Of the tin clock in the silence and the tick of my pulse contend. 

In this prolongation of solitude, I am estranged 
Even from myself, in you; in your absence I dwindle apart 
In a ghostly attenuation of feeling, till all my deranged 
Consciousness aches in the void for the physical thud of your 
heart. 

LIVING 

The smoky blue of evening wreathes from fields 

Of tumbled clay, 
And lanes where summer's trampled body sprawls 

In damp decay. 

Through the thin mist, a heavy tread encroaching, 
I greet my neighbor 

210 



D. S. SAVAGE 

Clumsily slouching homeward to his cottage, 
Tired after labour. 

Alone with dusk, I light a cigarette, 

But let it smoulder. 
Another year burns down to stub and ash, 

And I am older. 



CONFESSION 

You have said, for certain 
To be true, to be good 
Words must be written 
In the heart's blood. 

I have tried, I have tried, 
I have labored and toiled 
Till the ink dried 
Or the blood cooled. 

I know that blood is bitter, 
That ink tastes sour, 
The hand runs better 
When the heart is sure. 

I walk among men 
With my labour and pain, 
Blood on the pen, 
Ink in the vein. 



211 



D. S. SAVAGE 

ABSENT CREATION 

I wait for wonder, or the weather's turn 
To teach my tongue to wind its tangled skein 
Of loss or love, lilt out its awkward words, 
Or learn a rhythm from the weaving rain. 

I await that ease and excellence of mind 
That intimates suave movement to the hand, 
Letting the typewriter shuttle off its lines 
To a slow march, or stately saraband. 

But time and tide-turn, running past the ear, 

Seethe with distraction on a wasting sound, 

The hour-sands plunge, my fingers plough through care, 

I hear an endless clock thud underground. 

Upon this desert coast, this sea examinate, 
Lord, burst a cyclone, or a soothing rain, 
Detonate dams, flood cities, souse or intoxicate, 
That I may live, and feel, and speak again! 



Francis Scarfe 



TYNE DOCK 

The summer season at Tyne Dock 
Hoisted my boyhood in a crane 
Above the shaggy mining town, 
Above the slaghills and the rocks, 
Above the middens in backlanes 
And wooden hen-huts falling down. 

212 



FRANCIS SCARFE 

Vermilion grass grew in the street 
Where the blind pit-ponies pranced 
And poppies screamed by butchers' stalls 
Where bulls kicked sparks with dying feet, 
And in the naked larks I sensed 
A cruel god beneath it all. 

Over the pit-head wheel the moon 
Was clean as a girl's face in school; 
I envied the remote old man 
Who lived there, happy and alone, 
While in the kitchen the mad spool 
Unwound as Annie's treadle ran. 

The boyish season is still there 
For clapping hands and leaping feet 
Across the slagheaps and the dunes; 
And still it breaks into my care, 
Though I will never find the street, 
Nor catch the old, impulsive tune, 
Nor ever lose that child's despair. 

(April, 1947) 

THE GROTTO 

The sea still plunges where as naked boys 
We dared the currents and the racing tides 
That stamped red weals of fury on our thighs, 
Yet did not know our first love was the sea 
That rolled like colts between our shining knees, 
While under us the sands in golden curls 
Coiled round our bodies like the plaits of girls. 

213 



FRANCIS SCARFE 

We came oblique to passion on that shore 

Identified with our blind will to danger, 

As when we explored the slipping walls of caves 

Booming with dark more fearful than the waves 

Whose silence magnified the heart's deep roar 

Till senses beat that were asleep before, 

And in ourselves we recognized a stranger. 

Or when we scaled by Frenchman's Bay the cliff 
No man has dared though boys there in the night 
Still prove their manhood on its hostile side 
That was our climb from innocence to life; 
And yet, if I could be there once again, 
My love, I'd pause amazed among the gulls, 
Afraid of both the triumphs and the falls. 

In sea and grotto where we found our hearts 

Our youth remained, and all our days return 

In dream and vision to the mocking sea 

Where womanhood and manhood proudly stirred 

Within our silence like a singing bird, 

And never a dawning day will break as pure 

As our grave adoration, immature. 

THE CLOCK 

Far away is one who now is sleeping 

In the same world and the same darkness, 

But not in my keeping. 
Oh no, my arms could never stretch so far 
And my hands trembling with tenderness 

Cannot hope to caress 
Her limbs, save by remembering what they arc. 

214 



FRANCIS SCARFE 

Oh no, my words must never reach her ears 
That lie so white against her sombre hair, 

No, no, she must not hear 
My voice that has no happiness to bring, 
For she also is lost in a realm where 

My cry and my despair 
Are out of tune whatever song they sing. 

Perhaps as I lie waking she is dreaming, 
But not of me, for dreams are not so kind; 

While my eyes arc brimming 
With images of things that might have been, 
And my lips for a prayer for her peace of mind 

That, early, she may find 
A love more delicate and more serene. 

And all my body prays her to forget 
One who long cared for her too bitterly, 

One who is in her debt 

For the clock of suffering that kept, twelve years 

The hours of absence and futility, 
Who could love utterly 

Beyond the meaning of these words and tears. 

CATS 

Those who love cats which do not even purr 

Or which are thin and tired and very old, 

Bend down to them in the street and stroke their fur 

And rub their ears, and smooth their breast, and hold 

Them carefully, and gaze into their eyes of gold. 



215 



FRANCIS SCAllFB 

For how can they pass what does not ask for love 
But draws it out of those who have too much, 
Frustrated souls who cannot use it all, who have 
Somewhere too tight and sad within them, such 
A tenderness it flows through all they touch. 

They are the ones who love without reward, 

Those on whom eyes are closed, from whom heads turn, 

Who know only too well they can afford 

To squander love, since in the breast it burns 

With the cold anguish every lover learns. 

So they pass on, victims of silent things, 

And what they love remains indifferent 

And stretches in the sun and yawns, or licks the rings 

That sheathe its claws, or sleeps and is content, 

Not knowing who she was, or what she meant. 



THE WINDOW 

In after years, when you look back upon 
This time, and upon me, who am no more 
Close to your heart nor a shadow in your sun, 
Perhaps you will stand still and lean on the door 
Or lay down something, feeling quite undone. 

Some passing stranger, or a turn of phrase, 
Or any echo or shade, will be enough, 
Anything that is worn and almost effaced, 
Anything half finished, will be proof 
I was no natural but an acquired taste. 

216 



FRANCIS SCARFE 

So you will stand there, looking back, inspired 
As though the curtains parted on some view 
Not quite to be believed in, nor desired, 
And which did not exist except for you, 
Like some clay thing the potter never tired. 

No, it would not be wise to throw the window wide. 
Close it quickly, before it hurts, and go 
About your usual tasks, and let time hide 
Beneath mountains of hours, what you know 
Cannot be lived again, yet has not died. 

PROGRESSION 

See that satan pollarding a tree, 

That geometric man straightening a road: 

Surely such passions are perverse and odd 

That violate windows and set the north wind free. 

No doubt tomorrow the world will be too straight. 
Five hundred miles an hour will churn our dreams 
Like surprised whales, when we lie a dead weight 
In an ignorant sleep, and things will be what they seem. 

Tomorrow we will hear on the gramophone 

The music of the Spheres, registered H.M.V. 

By a divorced contralto: we shall perhaps 

Meet Adam under glass in a museum 

Fleshless and most unlovely, complete with pedigree. 

Or else, tomorrow, workers, kings and crooks 
Will all have aeroplanes and be fast friends, 
In a world no longer divided by dividends, 
Where love will be almost as simple as it looks. 

217 



Sidney Goodsir Smith 



LARGO 



Ae boat anerlie nou 
Fishes frae this shore, 
Ae black drifter lane 
Riggs the crammasie daw, 
Aince was a fleet, and nou 
Ae boat alane gaes oot. 

War ir Peace, the trawlers win 
An the youth turns awa 
.pricht wi baubles nou 
An thirled tae factory ir store; 
Their faithers fished their ain, 
Unmaistered; ane remains. 

And never the clock rins back, 

The free days are owre; 

The warld shrinks, we luik 

Mair t'oor maisters ilka hour 

Whan yon lane boat I see 

Daith an rebellion blinn ma ee! 

(anerlie - only; crammasie - crimson; daw - dawn; thirled - thralled) 

CAN I FORGET? 

Can I forget the sickle mune 
Owre Largo throu the driven clouds, 
The sea lik bilan milk at oor fit? 
Can I forget the snaw aroun 

218 



SIDNEY GOODSIR SMITH 

Ail the tent-flap lik a gun boom 
Whan the wund tuik it? 

Can I forget the wolves' houl 
Famished rinnan throu the toun 
O' haar an wund an lamplicht? 
Can I forget the staucheran news 
As Christ received the Spanish doom 
An nocht tae dae but drink o nichts? 

Can I forget ma black wound? 
Kirdcudbright, may ye be dung doun 
An dammed, Dundrennan too! 
Can I forget, (Och, never!) a luve 
Crottle in my twa haunds tae stour, 
The rose o ma hert wormed wi rue? 

Can I forget the Solway flows 
Gray as daith, or the worm i' the rose? 
Whiles, whiles; but it bides its hour. 
O, thornd nou, hert's fanatic pouer 
Strang as the skaith's a meisure o the luve. 

Can I forget whit the saul can prove, 

That luve is bricht as the skaith is dure, 

The skaith is deep as the luve is hie? 

Can I forget I'll neer can lose 

Twa tyger een nae mair nor those 

Lang houghs lik the silken dunes o the sea? 

Can I forget, ma luve, ma luve, 
Havana thrang wi drucken fules 

219 



SIDNEY GOODSIR SMITH 

And ye atnang them, lauchan queen? 
Can I forget, ma luve, ma luve, 
Strathyre's muckle bed in a wee room, 
White breists lik hills i the mime's lily learn? 

Can I forget the gifts o you, 
Yon music that's the wine o luve, 
The birds' wild sea-sang in yir hair? 
Can I forget, ma pouter doo, 
Voar an hairst an winter are you, 
Sun an mune an the warld, ma dear? 

(fit - feet; haar - sleet; wund - wind; staucherin - staggering; crottle - 
crumble away; stour - dust; skaith - wound; houghs - thighs; lauchan - 
laughing; learn - gleam; pouter doo - pouter dove; voar - spring; hairst 

- autumn) 

WHAN THE HERT IS LAICH 

Lamb, whan the hert is laich, 
Lourd wi' the haill warld's wecht, 
A boulder's whare the hert shud be, 
A muckle stane that burdens yee. 

Ye sit lik a cairn o stane yersel, 
The burds' blye sangs ye hear wi laith, 
The sakless burn rins doun tae hell, 
The aince-luved trees a choir o daith. 

An whitna cause ye mayna tell 
Nor casting reason bring release, 
Ye sit lik a stane an watch the hills 
That mock yir thrawan with their peace. 

(Laich - low, lourd - heavy, haill - whole, wecht - weight, muckle - great, 
laith - loathe, loth, blye - blithe, sakless - blameless, burn - brook, whitna 

- whatever, thrawan - throes) 

22O 



SIDNEY GOODSIR SMITH 

SANG: RECOIL O SKAITH 

Wersh an drumlie are the lees 

Ma lips are suppan nou, 

Wersh an wan the bitter brec 

Bled frae the skaith o luve; 

O wald I'd flee the thochts that ding, 

Thir nichts I mayna sleep, 

But aye the gorgoulls gowl ahint 

An roun ma hert they creep. 

wersh the lees that curl ma lips 
An sick ma stoundit saul, 

1 ken douce reason bids me wheesht 
But, luve, the hert is cauld! 

Yet thfou the cauldrife dirl o skaith 
That dings ma hert sae fell 
There learns yir tyger glaummcrie 
I maun loo i the pit o hell. 

(wersh - bitter, drumlie - roiled and muddy, bree - brew, skaith - wound, 
ding - beat, gargoulls - goblins, gowl - howl, ahint - behind, stoundit - 
stunned, douce - soft, cauldrife - freezing, dirl - pierce, dings - strikes, 
glaummerie - glamor, maun - must, loo - love) 



William Soutar 

THE STAR 

Whan my faither's faither was a bairn 
Wi nocht but bairnly care 
Yon haw-tree fleurin on the cairn 
Had weather'd a hundred year. 

221 



WILLIAM SOUTAR 

And the hill was green abune its rock, 
And the burn cam burblin doun, 
Lang, lang, afore die hamely folk 
Biggit our borough-toun. 

And yon wee licht frae its lanely place 
Glinted as cauld and clear 
Whan nicht rov'd through this howe o* space 
Afore a world was here. 

BALLAD 

O! shairly ye hae seen my love 
Doun whaur the waters wind; 
He walks like ane wha fears nae man 
And yet his e'en are kind. 

O! shairly ye hae seen my love 
At the turnin* o' the tide; 
For then he gethers in the nets 
Doun by the waterside. 

O! lassie I hae seen your love 
At the turnin' o' the ride; 
And he was wi' the fisher-folk 
Doun by the waterside. 

The fisher-folk were at their trade 
No far from Walnut Grove; 
They gether'd in their dreepin* nets 
And found your ain true love. 

222 



WILLIAM SOUTAR 

THE GOWK 

Half doun the hill where fa's the linn, 

Far frae the flaught of fowk t 
I saw upon a lanely whin, 
A lanely singin' gowk! 

Cuckoo, cuckoo; 
Behind my back 

The howie hill stuid up and spak, 
Cuckoo, cuckoo. 

There was nae soun', the loupin' linn 

Was frostit in its fa'; 
Nae bird was on the lanely whin 
Sae white with fleurs o' snaw, 

Cuckoo, cuckoo; 
I stuid stane still 
And gently spak the howie hill 
Cuckoo, cuckoo. 

THE TRYST 

luely, luely, cam she in 
And luely she lay doun: 

1 kent her be her caller lips 

And her breists sae sma* and roun*. 

A* thru the nicht we spak nae word 
Nor sinder'd bane frae bane: 
A* thru the nicht I heard her hert 
Gang soundin' wi* my ain. 

223 



WILLIAM SOUTAR 

It was about the waukrife hour 
When cocks begin to craw 
That she smool'd saftly thru the mirk 
Afore the day wud daw. 

Sae luely, luely, cam she in 
Saie luely was she gaen; 
And wi* her a* my simmer days 
Like they had never been. 

WAIT FOR THE HOUR 

(to a poet) 

When day follows inarticulate day; 

When the mind would speak 

But the heart has nought to say 

Wait for the hour. 

Wait for the hour 

Nor fret against the sense 

Which is more old, more wise than intelligence. 

O thrust not forth your word 

Like a driven bird 

Which braves its fledgeling breast to the blasts of the air; 

Which strains an awkward wing 

To meet the spring 

While yet the fields are broken and the boughs are bare. 

Wait for the hour; 

As, hoarded within the bud, 

The leaves must wait if they would bear a flower: 

As wait earth's waters till their strength can flood 

Under the moon. 

Wait for the hour: 

224 



WILLIAM SOUTAR 



It is not late nor soon, 
But this your power 
To curb the fretful brain and trust the blood. 



THE THOCHT 

Young Janie was a strappin* lass 

Wha deid in jizzen-bed, 
And monie a thocht her lover thocht 

Lang eftir she was dead; 

But aye, wi' a' he brocht to mind 

O' misery and wrang, 
There was a gledness gathered in 

Like the owercome o' a sang: 

And, gin the deid are naethingness 

Or they be minded on, 
As hinny to a hungry ghaist 

Maun be a thocht like yon. 

(owercome - refrain; hinny - honey) 

THE PERMANENCE OF THE YOUNG MEN 

No man outlives the grief of war 
Though he outlive its wreck: 
Upon the memory a scar 
Through all his years will ache. 

Hope will revive when horrors cease; 
And dreaming dread be stilled; 

225 



WILLIAM SOUTAR 

But there shall dwell within his peace 
A sadness unannulled. 



Upon his world shall hang a sign 
Which summer cannot hide: 
The permanence of the young men 
Who are not by his side. 



Bernard Spencer 

AEGEAN ISLANDS 1940-41 

Where white, stares, smokes or breaks, 

Thread white, white of plaster and of foam, 

Where sea like a wall falls; 

Ribbed, lionish coast, 

The stony islands which blow into my mind 

More often than I imagine my grassy home; 

To sun one's bones beside the 
Explosive, crushed-blue, nostril-opening sea 
(The weaving sea, splintered with sails and foam, 
Familiar of famous and deserted harbours, 
Of coins with dolphins on and fallen pillars.) 

To know the gear and skill of sailing, 

The drenching race for home and the sail-white houses, 

Stories of Turks and smoky ikons, 

Cry of the bagpipe, treading 

Of the peasant dancers; 

226 



BERNARD SPENCER 

The dark bread 

The island wine and the sweet dishes; 
All these were elements in a happiness 
More distant now than any date like '40, 
A. D. or B. C., ever can express. 



LETTERS 

Letters, like blood along a weakening body 
move fainter round our map. On dangerous wings, 
on darkness-loving keels they go, so longed for; 
but say no memorable things. 

The "dear" and "darling" and the "yours for ever" 
are relics of a style. But most appears 
mere rambling notes; passion and tenderness 
fall like a blot or a burst of tears. 

Now public truths are scarcer currency, 
what measure for the personal truth? how can 
this ink and paper coursing continents 
utter the clothed or the naked man? 



A HAND 

The human hand lying on my hand 
(The wrist had a gilt bangle on) 
Wore its print of personal lines 
Took breath as lungs and leaves and 
Tasted in the skin our sun. 



227 



BERNARD SPENCER 

The living palm and the near-to-bone: 
Fine animal hairs where the light shone. 

The handed mole to its earth, the stoat to the dark 
And this flesh to its nature nervously planned; 
To dig love's heart till everything is shown, 
To hunt, to hold its mark 
This loved hand. 



ILL 

Expectant at the country gate the lantern. On the night 

Its silks of light strained. Lighted upper window. 

"Is it you who sent for me?" The two go in 

To where the woman lies ill, upstairs, out of sight. 

I hear sky softly smother to earth in rain. 

As I sit by the controls and the car's burning dials. 

And always the main-road traffic searching, searching the 

horizons. 
Then those sounds knifed by the woman's Ah! of pain. 

Who dreamed this; the dark folding murderer's hands round 

the lamps? 
The rain blowing growth to rot? Lives passed beneath a 

ritual 

That tears men's ghosts and bodies; the few healers 
With their weak charms, moving here and there among the 

lamps? 



228 



Stephen Spender 



A CHILDHOOD 

I am glad I met you on the edge 
Of your barbarous childhood 

In what purity of pleasure 
You danced alone like a peasant 
For the stamping joy's own sake! 

How, set in their sandy sockets, 
Your clear, truthful, transparent eyes 
Shone out of the black frozen landscape 
Of those gray-clothed schoolboys! 

How your shy hand offered 

The total generosity 

Of original unforewarned fearful trust, 

In a world grown old in iron hatred! 

I am glad to set down 

The first and ultimate you, 

Your inescapable soul. Although 

It fade like a fading smile 

Or light falling from faces 

Which some grimmer preoccupation replaces. 

This happens everywhere at every time: 
Joy lacks the cause for joy, 
Love the answering love, 

229 



STEPHEN SPENDER 

And truth the objectless persistent loneliness, 

As they grow older, 

To become later what they were 

In childhood earlier, 

In a world of cheating compromise. 

Childhood, its own flower, 

Flushes from the grasses with no reason 

Except the sky of that season. 

But the grown desires need objects 

And taste of these corrupts the tongue 

And the natural need is scattered 

In satisfactions which satisfy 

A debased need. 

Yet all prayers are on die side of 

Giving strength to naturalness, 

So I pray for nothing new, 

I pray only, after such knowledge, 

That you may have the strength to be you. 

And I shall remember 
You who, being younger, 
Will probably forget. 

ON THE PILOTS WHO DESTROYED GERMANY IN 
THE SPRING OF 1945 

I stood on a roof top and they wove their cage 
Their murmuring throbbing cage, in the air of blue crystal. 
I saw them gleam above the town like diamond bolts 
Conjoining invisible struts of wire, 

230 



STEPHEN SPENDER 

Carrying through the sky their geometric cage 
Woven by senses delicate as a shoal of flashing fish. 

They went. They left a silence in our streets below 

Which boys gone to schoolroom leave in their playground. 

A silence of asphalt, of privet hedge, of staring wall. 

In the glass emptied sky their diamonds had scratched 

Long curving finest whitest lines. 

These the day soon melted into satin ribbons 

Falling over heaven's terraces near the golden sun. 

Oh that April morning they carried my will 

Exalted expanding singing in their aeriel cage. 

They carried my will. They dropped it on a German town. 

My will expanded and tall buildings fell down. 

Then, when die ribbons faded and the sky forgot, 

And April was concerned with building nests and being hot 

I began to remember the lost names and faces. 

Now I tie the ribbons torn down from those terraces 
Around the most hidden image in my lines, 
And my life, which never paid the price of their wounds, 
Turns thoughts over and over like a propellor 
Assumes their guilt, honours, repents, prays for them. 

THE LABOURER IN THE VINEYARD 

Here are the ragged towers of vines 
Stepped down the slope in terraces. 

Through torn spaces between spearing leaves 
The lake glows with waters combed sideways, 



STEPHEN SPENDER 

And climbing up to reach the vine-spire vanes 
The mountain crests beyond the far shore 
Paint their sky of glass with rocks and snow. 

Lake below, mountains above, between 

Turrets of leaves, grape-triangles, the labourer stands. 

His tanned trousers form a pedestal, 

Coarse tree-trunk rising from the earth with bark 

Peeled away at the navel to show 

Shining torso of sun-burnished god 

Breast of lyre, mouth coining song. 

My ghostly, passing-by thoughts gather 
Around his hilly shoulders, like those clouds 
Around those mountain peaks their transient scrolls. 

He is the classic writing all this day, 

Through his mere physical being focussing 

All into nakedness. His hand 

With outspread fingers is a star whose rays 

Concentrate timeless inspiration 

Onto the god descended in a vineyard 

With hand unclenched against the lake's taut sail 

Flesh filled with statue, as the grape with wine. 

ON THE THIRD DAY 

On the first summer day I lay in the valley. 

Above rocks the sky sealed my eyes with a leaf 

The grass licked my skin. The flowers bound my nostrils 

With scented cotton threads. The soil invited 

My hands and feet to grow down and have roots. 

232 



STEPHEN SPENDER 

Bees and grass-hoppers drummed over 

Crepitations of thirst rising from dry stones, 

And the ants rearranged my ceaseless thoughts 

Into different patterns for ever the same. 

Then the blue wind fell out of the air 

And the sun hammered down till I became of wood 

Glistening brown beginning to warp. 

On the second summer day I climbed through the forest's 

Huge tent pegged to the mountain-side by roots. 

My direction was cancelled by that great sum of trees. 

Here darkness lay under the leaves in a war 

Against light, which occasionally penetrated 

Splintering spears through several interstices 

And dropping white clanging shields on the soil. 

Silence was stitched through with thinnest pine needles 

And bird songs were stifled behind a hot hedge. 

My feet became as heavy as logs. 

I drank up all the air of the forest. 

My mind changed to amber transfixed with dead flies. 

On the third summer day I sprang from the forest 
Into the wonder of a white snow-tide. 
Alone with the sun's wild whispering wheel, 
Grinding seeds of secret light on frozen fields, 
Every burden fell from me, the forest from my back, 
The valley dwindled to bewildering visions 
Seen through torn shreds of the sailing clouds. 
Above the snowfield one rock against the sky 
Shaped out of pure silence a naked tune 
Like a violin when the tune forsakes the instrument 
And the pure sound flies through the ears' gate 
And a whole sky floods the pool of one mind. 



STEPHEN SPENDER 

O NIGHT O TREMBLING NIGHT 

O night O trembling night O night of sighs 
O night when my body was a rod O night 
When my mouth was a vague animal cry 
Pasturing on her flesh O night 
When the close darkness was a nest 
Made of her hair and filled with my eyes 

(O stars impenetrable above 
The fragile tent poled with our thighs 
Among the petals falling fields of time 
O night revolving all^our dark away) 

O day O gradual day O sheeted light 
Covering her body as with dews 
Until I brushed her sealing sleep away 
To read once more in the uncurtained day 
Her naked love, my great good news. 



Derek Stanford 

THE TOMB OF HONEY SNAPS ITS MARBLE CHAINS 
"fecris settlement pour vous exaher." Guillaume Apollinaire 

Year after year before my life began 
I lived with lug-worms in a sunken marsh. 
Feet of the town stamped over me by day: 
clocks of the town above me chimed at night. 

Fossil among the gutters of the world, 
I grew like cactus in a pavement's crack; 

234 



DEREK STANFORD 

cigarette-ash and excrement my food, 

urine of dogs and rain moistened my mouth. 

My head was bent, 
my lips were glued to earth; 
boots strode upon the gang-plank of my neck; 
beetles filed through the postern of my teeth 
and scurried down the lift-shaft of my throat. 

Darkness, the taste of sourness, choking dust, 
the insane speech of dynasties of mice; 
Time in his own asylum faintly raving, 
contriving wreaths of slime-dank silver daisies, 
kissing his luminous finger-tips to Death. 

The arrogance of haughty high-heeled shoes, 
the chain-gang trudge of a multitude of slaves 
forged an iron echo in my shackled skull. 
The moon's infected spittle lay in my hair. 

How can I write of the buried will's revolt, 
that vast protracted midnight of rebellion 
when the heart cracks like the sepulchre of a god, 
and Time and Fate earth's hypocritical mourners 
freeze into standing shadows, 
and resurrection 
grapples and shatters its pre-determined shell? 

So I was born in an avalanche of carnage, 
torn from the jailor-image of my heart, 
severed in pain from die double of all my durance: 
reeking with crimsoned sweat I stood complete. 

235 



DEREK STANFORD 

How can I speak of the trumpets and the garlands, 
giant hands that tended me sheathed in gloves of flowers; 
choirs, beyond stars, proclaiming through the ether 
"Only the Free shall discover the Morning River; 
only the Free who are pure shall uncover My Face," 

I drank the Milky Way's sweet foaming cordial 
fresh from the spouting nipples of the sky. 
Now I walk upright, crowned with the bee's gold halo; 
sure-footed as a panther, shod with fern. 

For those who slake their thirst at the constellations, 
who wear their love like a sprig of mistle-toe, 
the Spring shall be a never-failing garden, 
and bread shall be "a star upon the tongue." 

CAROL FOR HIS DARLING ON CHRISTMAS DAY 

Tonight the Christmas landscape of the skull 
throngs brightly with white images of angels 
like parallel ropes of pearl, poised above spires, 
surmounting towers, ascending and descending. 

Streets, squares, and gardens of the tired heart's town 
receive snow- wise the promise of this song, 
shuttling its theme like a glinting row of beads 
between the icy earth and the granite sky. 

Christ, sing the voices like uplifted candles, 
is born anew in memory's dim manger, 
warmed by the friendly incense of the oxen; 
miraculous and immaculate as snow. 

236 



DEREK STANFORD 

The unrejoicirig heart has resurrection; 
joy burns in the air like an incandescent star. 
But this is a story for our private theatre: 
outside, the night is dank and uninspired. 

Down by the shore the wave repeats its secret 
of banal worth to the uninterested sand, 
and here the senile ash in the funeral fire 
utters its grey disintegrating sigh. 

Darling, accept these symbols of thanksgiving, 
these blanched and shining signs of blessedness, 
these jubilations of the lonely night-time, 
these holly rites of a happy imagination. 

It was your love designed this festival: 
your love I feel as an ether-weighted flake, 
as the shy white Christmas snow that falls in mye heart, 
stroking its dales with a tingling finger of peace. 



Julian Symons 

SPRING POEM 

The muscles flex, contract, 
Over the sprouting garden, 
The blood moves to shade from 
Faces this burning sun, 
Running and roaring spring 
Permits me to say thanks 
Now the tent arm includes 
You with the cooing pigeons. 

237 



JULIAN SYMONS 

The arm takes in its sweep 
The strengthening light the flowers 
And the hard touch of love, 
Not asking what is ready 
Or wishing what is good 
Is aware only of slow 
Movement of the body 
We shall possess, not keep. 

We know little of good 
And that little goes away, 
But the sad human heart 
Must always wish for joy, 
For the face like alabaster 
Which is breathing and warm 
And the arm falling like velvet 
On the opposing arm. 

Minutes will move and brush 
This season from the hand, 
The year moves on to worse 
Than we have ever known, 
But uncritical this moment 
I give thanks for the drug 
That turns two into one, 
Making casual the eye, 
Stopping the mind's deceit, 
Letting the arm select 
You with the flowers and pigeons. 



238 



JULIAN SYMONS 

FOR MY WIFE 

Sitting at evening in the warm grass 

I look at the barracks cradled between hills. 

Purring along the sky the fighters pass. 

A daze of heat fills 

Up my mind against the usual fears. 

I think of these last two years 

Stamped permanently upon our wavering lives. 

I think of you. The very face of love 

Speaks, and tells me what love gives: 

This power to see and move 

Outside ourselves, these trees and this green view: 

As I, alone and idle here, see you, 

So easily laughing and so quickly happy 
Or quickly sad, for whom the natural 
Events of life are tidal like the sea: 
For whom the world is all 
Simple, made up exclusively of people: 
Now, although each church steeple 

Reveals the power of idols, every action 

Involves its opposite and must disclose 

A painful birth of bureaucratic faction, 

Today when every rose 

Shows up its worm, I more than ever preserve 

This radical and single love we serve. 

And I present this love now as a symbol 

Of our best hopes, and weigh this good we've known 

Against the times when we betray and dissemble; 

239 



JULIAN SYMONS 

Now in this place alone 

I offer unaffected thanks that we, 

In spite of our time, being together are happy. 

And in the future that we move towards, I trust 

That whatever fails at least this may survive 

As compensation for our end of dust, 

This love, that is alive 

And vivid in a world of falsehood, 

That, where so much is doubtful, certainly is good. 

HOMAGE TO OUR LEADERS 

These larger-than-life comic characters, 
Churchill the moonface moocow chewing 
A permanent cigar, Roosevelt the gigantic 
False Liberal mask with syrup smile, 
Medicine-man Stalin like Aunt Sally at a fair, 
All snapping like canvas in the wind... 

Our world, our time, our murder 

Evolved these monsters: who like the allosaurus 

Should be remembered as a stupidity 

We have outgrown. Now they sprawl across 

Hoardings, papers, radios, these simple shapeless demons. 

Friend, lock your door at night: watch neighbour and wife, 

See that your eyes are hidden behind dark glasses, 

Remember that you live by permission of the police. 



240 



Dylan Thomas 



POEM 



Especially when the October wind 
With frosty fingers punishes my hair, 
Caught by the crabbing sun I walk on fire 
And cast a shadow crab upon the land, 
By the sea's side, hearing the noise of birds, 
Hearing the raven cough in winter sticks, 
My busy heart who shudders as she talks 
Sheds the syllabic blood and drains her words. 

Shut, too, in a tower of words, I mark 

On the horizon walking like the trees 

The wordy shapes of women, and the rows 

Of the star-gestured children in the park. 

Some let me make you of the vowelled beeches, 

Some of the oaken voices, from the roots 

Of many a thorny shire tell you notes, 

Some let me make you of the water's speeches. 

Behind a pot of ferns the wagging clock 
Tells me the hour's word, the neural meaning 
Flies on the shafted disc, declaims the morning 
And tells the windy weather in the cock. 
Some let me make you of the meadow's signs; 
The signal grass that tells me all I know 
Breaks with the wormy winter through the eye. 
Some let me tell you of the raven's sins. 



241 



DYLAN THOMAS 

Especially when the October wind 

(Some let me make you of autumnal spells, 

The spider-tongued, and the loud hill of Wales) 

With fist of turnips punishes the land, 

Some let me make you of the heartless words. 

The heart is drained that, spelling in the scurry 

Of chemic blood, warned of the coming fury. 

By the sea's side hear the dark-vowelled birds. 

POEM 

A process in the weather of the heart 
Turns damp to dry; the golden shot 
Storms in the freezing tomb. 
A weather in the quarter of the veins 
Turns night to day; blood in their suns 
Lights up the living worm. 

A process in the eye forewarns 

The bones of blindness; and the womb 

Drives in a death as life leaks out. 

A darkness in the weather of the eye 
Is half its light; the fathomed sea 
Breaks on unangled land. 
The seed that makes a forest of the loin 
Forks half its fruit; and half drops down, 
Slow in a sleeping wind. 

A weather in the flesh and bone 

Is damp and dry; the quick and dead 

Move like two ghosts before the eye. 

242 



DYLAN THOMAS 

A process in the weather of the world 
Turns ghost to ghost; each mothered child 
Sits in their double shade. 
A process blows the moon into the sun, 
Pulls down the shabby curtains of the skin; 
And the heart gives up its dead. 

IN MEMORY OF ANN JONES 

After the funeral, mule praises, brays, 

Windshake of sailshaped ears, muffle- toed tap 

Tap happily of one peg in the thick 

Grave's foot, blinds down the lids, the teeth in black, 

The spittled eyes, the salt ponds in the sleeves, 

Morning smack of the spade that wakes up sleep, 

Shakes a desolate boy who slits his throat 

In the dark of the coffin and sheds dry leaves, 

That breaks one bone to light with a judgment clout, 

After the feast of tear-stuffed time and thistles 

In a room with a stuffed fox and a stale fern, 

I stand, for this memorial's sake, alone 

In the snivelling hours with dead, humped Ann 

Whose hooded, fountain heart once fell in puddles 

Round the parched worlds of Wales and drowned each sun 

(Though this for her is a monstrous image blindly 

Magnified out of praise; her death was a still drop; 

She would not have me sinking in the holy 

Flood of her heart's fame; she would lie dumb and deep 

And need no druid of her broken body). 

But I, Ann's bard on a raised hearth, call all 

The seas to service that her wood-tongued virtue 

Babble like a bellbuoy over the hymning heads, 

243 



DYLAN THOMAS 

Bow down the walls of the ferned and foxy woods 
That her love sing and swing through a brown chapel, 
Bless her bent spirit with four, crossing birds. 
Her flesh was meek as milk, but this skyward statue 
With the wild breast and blessed and giant skull 
Is carved from her in a room with a wet window 
In a fiercely mourning house in a crooked year. 
I know her scrubbed and sour humble hands 
Lie with religion in their cramp, her threadbare 
Whisper in a damp word, her wits drilled hollow, 
Her fist of a face died clenched on a round pain; 
And sculptured Ann is seventy years of stone. 
These cloud-sopped, marble hands, this monumental 
Argument of the hewn voice, gesture and psalm 
Storm me forever over her grave until 
The stuffed lung of the fox twitch and cry Love 
And the strutting fern lay seeds on the black sill. 

AND DEATH SHALL HAVE NO DOMINION 

And death shall have no dominion. 

Dead men naked they shall be one 

With the man in the wind and the west moon; 

When their bones are picked clean and the clean bones gone, 

They shall have stars at elbow and foot; 

Though they go mad they shall be sane, 

Though they sink through the sea they shall rise again; 

Though lovers be lost love shall not; 

And death shall have no dominion. 

And death shall have no dominion. 
Under the windings of the sea 

244 



DYXAN THOMAS 

They lying long shall not die windily; 
Twisting on racks when sinews give way, 
Strapped to a wheel, yet they shall not break; 
Faith in their hands shall snap in two, 
And the unicorn evils run them through; 
Split all ends up they shan't crack; 
And death shall have no dominion. 

And death shall have no dominion. 
No more may gulls cry at their ears 
Or waves break loud on the seashores; 
Where blew a flower may a flower no more 
Lift its head to the blows of the rain; 
Though they be made and dead as nails, 
Heads of the characters hammer through daisies; 
Break in the sun till the sun breaks down, 
And death shall have no dominion. 



IN MY CRAFT OR SULLEN ART 

In my craft or sullen art 

Exercised in the still night 

When only the moon rages 

And the lovers lie abed 

With all their griefs in their arms, 

I labour by singing light 

Not for ambition or bread 

Or the strut and trade of charms 

On the ivory stages 

But for the common wages 

Of their most secret heart. 

245 



DYLAN THOMAS 

Not for the proud man apart 
From the raging moon I write 
On these spindrift pages 
Not for the towering dead 
With their nightingales and psalms 
But for the lovers, their arms 
Round the griefs of the ages, 
Who pay no praise or wages 
Nor heed my craft or art. 

POEM IN OCTOBER 

It was my thirtieth year to heaven 
Woke to my hearing from harbour and neighbour wood 

And the mussel pooled and the heron 
Priested shore 

The morning beckon 

With water praying and call of seagull and rook 
And the knock of sailing boats on the net webbed wall 

Myself to set foot 
That second 

In the still sleeping town and set forth. 

My birthday began with the water 
Birds and the birds of the winged trees flying my name 

Above the farms and the white horses 
And I rose 

In rainy autumn 

And walked abroad in a shower of all my days. 
High tide and the heron dived when I took the road 

Over the border 
And the gates 

Of the town closed as the town awoke. 

246 



DYLAN THOMAS 

A springful of larks in a rolling 
Cloud and the roadside bushes brimming with whistling 

Blackbirds and the sun of October 
Summery 

On the hill's shoulder, 

Here were fond climates and sweet singers suddenly 
Come in the morning where I wandered and listened 

To the rain wringing 
Wind blow cold 

In the wood faraway under me. 

Pale rain over the dwindling harbour 
And over the sea wet church the size of a snail 

With its horns through mist and the castle 
Brown as owls, 

But all the gardens 

Of spring and summer were blooming in the tall tales 
Beyond the border and under the lark full cloud. 

There could I marvel 

My birthday 
Away but the weather turned around. 

It turned away from the blithe country 
And down the other air and the blue altered sky 

Streamed again a wonder ot summer 
With apples 

Pears and red currants 

And I saw in the turning so clearly a child's 
Forgotten mornings when he walked with his mother 

Through the parables 
Of sun light 

And the legends of the green chapels. 

247 



DYLAN THOMAS 

And the twice told fields of infancy 
That his tears burned my cheeks and his heart moved in mine 

These were the woods the river and sea 
Where a boy 

In the listening 

Summertime of the dead whispered the truth of his joy 
To the trees and the stones and the fish in the tide. 

And the mystery 
Sang alive 

Still in the water and singing birds. 

And there could I marvel my birthday 
Away but the weather turned around. And the true 

Joy of the long dead child sang burning 
In the sun. 

It was my thirtieth 

Year to heaven stood there then in the summer noon 
Though the town below lay leaved with October blood. 

O may my heart's truth 
Still be sung 

On this high hill in a year's turning. 

POEM 

The force that through the green fuse drives the flower 

Drives my green age; that blasts the roots of trees 

Is my destroyer. 

And I am dumb to tell the crooked rose 

My youth is bent by the same wintry fever. 

The force that drives the water through the rocks 
Drives my red blood; that dries the mouthing streams 

248 



DYLAN THOMAS 

Turns mine to wax. 

And I am dumb to mouth unto my veins 

How at the mountain spring the same mouth sucks. 

The hand that whirls the water in the pool 
Stirs the quicksand; that ropes the blowing wind 
Hauls my shroud sail. 
And I am dumb to tell the hanging man 
How of my clay is made the hangman's lime. 

The lips of time leech to the fountain head; 
Love drips and gathers, but the fallen blood 
Shall calm her sores. 

And I am dumb to tell a weather's wind 
How time has ticked a heaven round the stars. 

And I am dumb to tell the lover's tomb 

How at my sheet hoes the same crooked worm. 

A REFUSAL TO MOURN THE DEATH, BY FIRE, OF 
A CHILD IN LONDON 

Never until the mankind making 

Bird beast and flower 

Fathering and all humbling darkness 

Tells with silence the last light breaking 

And the still hour 

Is come of the sea tumbling in harness 

And I must enter again the round 

Zion of the water bead 

And the synagogue of the ear of corn 

249 



DYLAN THOMAS 

Shall I let pray the shadow of a sound 

Or sow my salt seed 

In the least valley of sackcloth to mourn 

The majesty and burning of the child's death. 

I shall not murder 

The mankind of her going with a grave truth 

Nor blaspheme down the stations of the breath 

With any further 

Elegy of innocence and youth. 

Deep with the first dead lies London's daughter, 

Robed in the long friends, 

The grains beyond age, the dark veins of her mother 

Secret by the unmourning water 

Of the riding Thames. 

After the first death, there is no other. 



Terence Tiller 
NO TIME 

You will not see the sorrow of no time. 

There will be birds bearing rings, ravens; hands 

with an empty hourglass and a sword. 

Things half-seen in a familiar room 

will rise against you. These will be dangerous friends. 

You will not see the sorrow of no time 

Or singing burst your melancholy cord. 

In days of nightingales, and when our streets 
are all nostalgic turnings, and the west 

250 



TERENCE TILLER 

a broken harbour, there will be terror walking.. 
You will not know the crossing of our hearts, 
the final stake that burrows through the breast. 
The cruel delicious voices of the birds 
will be silent for you. For you unwaking. 

Then all my journeys will be bellman-like, 
a wanderer in your city crying hours. 
Call me the raven friend: that cry will come. 
There will be nothing in the opened book 
but evil spoken. These are the hollowed years. 
Death in the longing way begins to walk. 

You will not see the sorrow of 110 time. 



PROTHALAMION 

The instant splendour, the swung bells that speak 
once to the unprepared glory of youth; 

then the bewildering care: 

and nothing more but the stag's backward look, 
and the approach of all we were. 

And this is the key of the kingdom. Oh my love, 
there was a time when the blue-feathered sky, 

the gilded haughty trees, 

clad the sardonic rook in the voice of the dove; 
when homeward streets were palaces, 

and earth was the delight held in a child's hand. 
We shook the door, stretched our hands out to the key; 
years closed behind. And yet 

251 



TERENCE TILLER 

we shall not lose that age; it is the hound; 
we turn and hear his steady feet. 

Over our human purpose winds go 
round the unpeopled spaces of the night; 

this night, when we shall join 
under their swaying canopy, we know 
our heart shall be a child's again. 

For they have blown, and the blind stag has fled, 
through our perfecting years. The kingdom comes 

though by a narrow gate. 
To snare his antlers in his native wood, 
the stag runs gladly, soon or late. 

This love shall fill the sky again with wings, 
and the trees' proud enamel of sunlight be 

as when our eyes were gods'. 
Here is the ghostly glory, and the bell swings 
here, in th$ mingling of our bloods. 

THE END OF THE STORY 

Put out the candle, close the biting rose, 
for cock and cony are asleep; the sheep 
in her secretive hills, with fleece at peace, 
now lies enfolded. 

The hungry sceptre-kissing mouth, the moth 
behind the fingers, no more eat the night; 
the rooting worm has crawled away from play 
in his wet burrows. 

252 



TERENCE TILLER 

Now the extremest joys are dreams and toys; 
it's darkness in a vast full-tide abed; 
over abandoned bodies time shall climb 
like the black spider. 

Give memory all amazing hours, all showers 
or sharply pouring seas between the knees; 
slack as a rope, the flesh is dull, and full 
of its perfection. 

And all that lately flashed and leapt is gripped 
into a knot of symbols; all's grown small, 
quiet as curtains: brave be this your grave, 
and fresh your garlands. 



BATHERS 

They flutter out of white, and run 
through the electric wind to bathe, 
giggling like rivers for the fun 
of smacking mud in the toes, of lithe 
and sliding bodies like their own 
sharp rushes, good to battle with. 

The child knows all delight to be 
naked and queer as his own name, 
foreign as being loved; but he 
feels as a kind of coming home 
the flags that slap his plunging knee, 
and the cold stocking of the stream. 

253 



TERENCE TILLER 

Coiling in wombs of water, bent 
backwards upon the sheets of air, 
his wand of sexless body lent 
to all that was or casts before, 
he strips to either element 
a foetus or a ravisher. 

So gladly virgin rivers rush 
down to their amniotic seas, 
children of cold and glittering flesh 
that promise harvest as they pass 
panics of tiny fertile fish 
in the fast pale of boisterous thighs. 



KILLED IN ACTION 

They know the lion's power, 

being now indifferent, 

whose eager limbs have learnt 

to suffer without fear 

or consoling love 

the bridal and the bed 

of the unearthly dead. 

They lie in beds of love 
with worn and vivid face, 
where fall in one embrace 
the dead by the alive 
the carnal by the just, 
being now indifferent 
to lust or monument. 

254 



TERENCE TILLER 

They have all grown just, 
as mindless change or growth 
animal life and death, 
blind blood of trees, thrust 
of the innocent spray 
and the pitiless flower: 
they know the lion's power. 

IMAGE IN A LILAC TREE 

Tireless budding and flowering of women 

to a child and a child; the closed evening-care 

of motherhood: from what slim boughs the lilac 

swells into lavender torches, the flesh 

blooms through its leaves! 

Or now the heart is heavy and sweet with words, 
and a great wind sways the tongue: oh eloquence 
of gardens bursting through the narrow pen 
into five senses, that clutch beauty as 
a child the breast! 

The lilac's evening-coloured breasts of smoke, 
bare like a Cretan lady's to the firm 
poetic moonlight: love, conception, birth, 
where the five tongues of living drink, and are 
poem and image. 



255 



Ruthven Todd 

WATCHING YOU WALK 

(For N) 

Watching you walk slowly across a stage, 
Suddenly I am become aware of all the past; 
Of all the tragic queens and maids of every age, 
Of Joan, whose love the flames could not arrest; 

Of those to whom always love was the first duty, 
Who saw behind the crooked world the ugly and weak, 
Whose kindliness was no gesture; no condescending pity 
Could rule their actions; those whom Time broke, 

But whom he could not totally destroy. 
Hearing the truth you give to these dead words, 
Whose writer feared the life they might enjoy, 
I can recall the mating orchestra of birds 

Behind your voice, as lying by the lake, 
You read me poems, and I, too deeply moved, 
Watched the swans for a moment, before I spoke 
The trivialities, unable to tell you how I loved. 

Watching your fingers curl about a painted death, 
I am suddenly glad that it is April, that you are queen 
Of all the sordid marches of my bruised heart, 
That, loving you, the poplars never seemed so green; 

Glad of my lonely walk beside the shrunken river, 
Thinking of you while seeing the tufts of ash, 

256 



RUTHVEN TODD 

The chestnut candles and unreal magnolia's wax flower; 
Glad that, in loving you, the whole world lives afresh. 

SIX WINTERS 

Six winters since, I dandled on my knee 

The neat-tholed toy that was my son, 

That yet was more than toy and more to me 

Than all the herodian innocents rolled in one, 

Or that child whose mother fled by the Egyptian sea. 

Now I am gallows where no mandrake grows, 
No bryony twines up my splintering grey shaft; 
Though hanging history creaks as the gale blows, 
My sole possessions are the leaves that drift 
This sodden autumn, waiting cementing snows: 

Or else my fancy says I am explorer still, 
Haunting the fringes of a never travelled land, 
The hypochondriac dreamer, torn by an untrue ill, 
Who dare not drop the guide-book from his hand, 
Nor venture more than eye's length from the closest hill. 

For these six winters of a war which stole 
This that I loved so much, have also taken 
Much that my time thought good, thought real, 
Been X-ray shewing the diagnostic much mistaken, 
Disclosed the gentle hand grown horned and cruel. 



257 



RUTHVEN TODt) 

TO A VERY BEAUTIFUL LADY 
(For U) 

And when you walk the world lifts up its head, 
Planets are haloed by the unembarassed stars, 
The town lies fallow at your feet, the ancient dead 
Recall their loves, their queens and emperors, 
Their shepherds and the quiet pastoral scene. 
For less than you Troy burned and Egypt fell, 
The corn was blasted while it still stood green 
And Faustus went protesting into hell. 

Be careful, sweet, adored by half your world, 
Time to its darlings is not always kind 
There lie the lovelies whom the years have scored 
Deeper than all the hearts which once repined. 
The knife you hold could cut an empire low, 
Or in your own breast place the suicidal blow. 

PERSONAL HISTORY: FOR MY SON 

O my heart is the unlucky heir of the ages 
And my body is unwillingly the secret agent 
Of my ancestors; those content with their wages 
From history: the Cumberland Quaker whose gentle 
Face was framed with lank hair to hide the ears 
Cropped as a punishment for his steadfast faith, 
The Spanish lady who had seen the pitch lake's broth 
In the West Indian island and the Fife farmers 
To whom the felted barley meant a winter's want. 



258 



RUTHVBN TODD 

My face presents my history, and its sallow skin 
Is parchment for the Edinburgh lawyer's deed: 
To have and hold in trust, as feeofee therein 
Until such date as the owner shall have need 
Thereof. My brown eyes are jewels I cannot pawn, 
And my long lip once curled beside an Irish bog, 
My son's whorled ear was once my father's, then mine; 
I am the map of a campaign, each ancestor has his flag 
Marking an advance or a retreat. I am their seed. 

As I write I look at the five fingers of my hand, 
Each with its core of nacre bone, and rippled nails; 
Turn to the palm and the traced unequal lines that end 
In death only at the tips my ancestry fails 
The dotted swirls are original, and are my own: 
Look at the fringed polyp which I daily use 
And ask its history, ask to what grave abuse 
It has been put: perhaps it curled about the stone 
Of Cain. At least it has known much of evil. 

And perhaps as much of good, been tender 
When tenderness was needed, and been firm 
On occasion, and in its past been free of gender, 
Been the hand of a mother holding the warm 
Impress of the child against her throbbing breast, 
Been cool to the head inflamed in fever, 
Sweet and direct in contact with a lover. 
O in its cupped and fluted shell lies all the past, 
My fingers close about the crash of history's storm. 

In the tent of night I hear the voice of Calvin 
Expending his hatred of the world in icy words; 

259 



RUTHVEN TODD 

Man less than a red ant beneath the towering mountain, 
And God a troll more fearful than the feudal lords: 
The Huguenots in me, flying Saint Bartholomew's Day, 
Are in agreement with all this, and their resentful hate 
Flames brighter than the candles on an altar, the grey 
Afternoon is lit by Catherine wheels of terror, the street 
Drinks blood and pity is death before their swords. 

The cantilever of my bones acknowledges the architect, 
My father, to whom always the world was a mystery 
Concealed in the humped base of a bottle, one solid fact 
To set against the curled pages and the tears of history. 
I am a Border keep, a croft and a solicitor's office, 
A country rectory, a farm and a drawing board: 
In me, as in so many, the past has stowed its miser's hoard, 
Won who knows where nor with what loaded dice. 
When my blood pulses it is their blood I feel hurry. 

These forged me, the latest link in a fertile chain, 
With ends that run so far that my short sight 
Cannot follow them, nor can my weak memory claim 
Acquaintance with the earliest shackle. In my height 
And breadth I hold history, and then my son 
Holds my history in his small body and the history of another, 
Who for me has no contact but that of flesh, his mother. 
What I make now I make, indeed, from the unknown, 
A blind man spinning furiously in the web of night. 

VARIOUS ENDS 

Sidney, according to report, was kindly hearted 
When stretched upon the field of death; 

260 



RUTHVEN TODD 

And in his gentleness, ignored the blood that spurted, 
Expending the last gutter of his flickering breath. 

Marlowe, whose raw temper used to rise 
Like boiling milk, went on the booize; 
A quick word and his half-startled eyes 
Mirrored his guts flapping on his buckled shoes. 

Swift went crazy in his lonely tower, 
Where blasphemous obscenity paid the warders, 
Who brought a string of visitors every hour 
To see the wild beast, the Dean in holy orders. 

And there were those who coughed out their sweet soft lungs 
Upon the mountains, or the clear green sea. 
Owen found half-an-ounce of lead with wings; 
And Tennyson died quietly, after tea. 

Sam Johnson scissored at the surgeon's stitches 
To drain more poison from his bloated body. 
And Bryon may have recalled the pretty bitches, 
Nursing his fevered head in hands unsteady. 

De Nerval finished swinging from a grid 
And round his neck the Queen of Sheba's garter. 
Swinburne died of boredom, doing as he was bid, 
And Shelley bobbed lightly on the Mediterranean water. 

Rimbaud, his leg grown blue and gross and round, 
Lay sweating for those last weeks on his truckle-bed; 
He could not die the future was unbroken ground 
Only Paris, Verlaine and poetry were dead. 

261 



RUTHVBN TODD 



Blake had no doubts, his old fingers curled 
Around dear Kate's frail and transparent hand; 
Death merely meant a changing of his world, 
A widening of experience, for him it marked no end. 



THE LONELY MONTH 
(For J) 

This long and lonely month 

With memory nagging like a broken gramophone, 

Evenings devoted to darts and too much beer, 

The early morning rising, 

The battering awkwardly upon the typewriter 

And the planting of strange seeds. 

This long and lonely month. 

This long and lonely month 

With the emptiness full of fluff and feathers, 

The silent house driving me out to walk 

Alone along these Essex lanes, 

Or to hoe the persistent weeds, 

The nettles and the thistles that push up 

Inevitably through the month. 

O yes, the yellow rock-rose 

Shews its wafer petals, and the scabious 

Buttons the roadsides, and the strawberry 

Ripens, and young apples fall. 

Yes, the sad prisoners thin the beet 

And the cuckoo presses on the ear, 

This long and lonely month . . . 

262 



RUTHVEN TODD 

This long and lonely month 
Cannot efface my visual memories, 
My last glance back before that corner 
Cut like a razor blade. 
Nor can I forget the small shadow 
Sliding away along the western sky, 
This long and lonely month. 

This long and lonely month, 

My love, had altered nothing in my heart; 

In a far country, you, too, are lonely, 

And these lines I write you now 

Send you my love and tell you that I myself 

Have been lonely as a leper, 

This long and lonely month. 



Henry Treece 

POEM 

In the dark caverns of the night, 

Loveless and alone, 

Friendless as wind that wails across the plains, 

I sit, the last man left on earth, 

Putting my fear on paper, 

Praying that love will flow from my dry pen 

And watching the tears make havoc on my page. 

And I remember then, 

Under the night's still mask, 

The gallant geese 

Making their way through storms, 

263 



HENRY TREECE 

The fieldmouse scattering to my door 

Away from the black cloud, 

And the gay snail 

Garnishing the twig before leaves came. 

The old ones told me, 

"When you grow grey you think on little things ;" 

Now these dreams kiss the bruises from my mind 

Under the night's still mask, 

As loveless and alone 

I sit, till dawn the last man left 

Who knows the sound of rain on summer leaves, 

The graceful swan breasting the blood-red stream, 

And heart's incompetence. 

POEM 

Death walks through the mind's dark woods, 

Beautiful as aconite, 

A lily-flower in his pale hand 

And eyes like moonstones burning bright. 

Love walks down heart's corridors 
Singing for a crust of bread 
All the tales of laughing youth 
Who tomorrow will lie dead. 



Here two summer metaphors; 
For even on a sun-mad day 
Laughter breaks into salt tears, 
And grave is never far away. 



264 



HENRY TREECE 

POEM 

Through the dark aisles of the wood 
Where the pine-needles deaden all sound 
And the dove flutters in the black boughs 

Through twilit vaults of the forest 

Where fungus stifles the roots 

And the squirrel escapes with a cone 

Through the dim alleys of pine 

Where the bent stick moves like a snake 

And the badger sniffs at the moon 

^Through the green graveyard of leaves 
Where the stoat rehearses his kill 
And the white skull grins in the fern. 

THE WAITING WATCHERS 

They shall come ih the black weathers 
From the heart of the dead embers, 
Walking one and two over the hill. 
And they shall be with you, never farther 
Than your bedside. 

At their will 

The smell of putrefaction lingers 
And floor is carpetted with rotting hair; 
Or sheets are torn to shreds 

By the beaks of dead dry birds 
And the red blood clots in your cup. 

Put up your swords! 

265 



HBNR? TRBECB 

What steel can cut the throat of next year's dream, 
What tongue is tunes to speak last night's quick scream > 
Go alone by darkness; 

Burn the clippings of your nail; 
Donate a thousand candles. 

But do as you will, 

When sun is blind and lamps are lit once more, 
Two and one, they shall be standing 

At your door. 

THE HAUNTED GARDEN 

In this sad place 

Memory hangs on the air 

Fragile as Spring snail's tiny shell, 

Coming to the sympathetic ear 

Gentle as bud's green pulsing in the sun, 

Suave as sin in a black velvet glove; 

The old faces gaze 

Wistfully as birds, among the nodding leaves, 

They watch the pleasures they may never share; 

And through the twilight hours 

Old voices call along the river banks, 

And out of the high-walled garden. 

Why do they sigh, 

The gentle ones in the flowering musk; 
And what are the words of the song 
The pale stranger sings as he walks 
The garden's still, deserted paths, 
Like a boy searching for his dog? 

266 



John Waller 



THE ENEMY 

One night I held all Europe in my arms 
And all the East, Asia and Africa. 
Limbs were their armies, those easy lips 
Their long grey fleets breathing of threat 
And doom, even each whisper seemed 
An airman gliding on his swallow path. 

That was a conflict and a peace in one; 

Holding each other fast, gay enemies 

Then mad with love. The joyful passionate evening 

Was declaration of war or armistice, just how 

You choose to think. In the still night 

The hotel room cradled us into sleep. 

Now in the empty days I feel the loss 

Of this illusion. Dull faces swarm 

Over the seven seas and old men 

Nod at the moon emptiness is like that 

While somewhere preparing another war 

You charm and entangle, merrily captivate. 

WHEN SADNESS FILLS A JOURNEY 

When sadness fills a journey 
There is no last remorse 
Between accepted ending 
And the final turn we pass 
To other sights or heroes 

267 



JOHN WALLER 

Or hunger in the cold 
Fine air of morning sadness 
Where all limbs must grow old. 

So now I wear your picture 
Against my heart for love 
And know that you will wander 
Across no lonely path, 
But as a brighter darling, 
A warm guest for the night, 
Cry still: "My dearest favour 
Is not so easily caught." 

You, as the hour's enchanter, 
Made circles as you would, 
Posing a tricky charmer 
Uncharmed but not withstood, 
So wear this song for parting, 
A gay song for the day 
When limbs and charm and favour 
Are warm but worn away. 

LEGEND 

Yesterday it seems you were acting on a stage 
Yet so many years ago, so many years 
I have heard the hooves of the horses racing 
Through early mornings and thought of Antony 
When his god left him at Alexandria sleeping 

So, like Cavafy, dreamt of evenings and lights, 
Laughter amid perils, the young not to return 

268 



JOHN WALLER 

From the ominous sands, a thought stained with laughter 
Or lights, lights, the king cried, lights to forget 
The dark, only your mood was softer 

Was soft as the quicksilver running along limbs 
That must always express, crying out from the sea 
So certain never to be lost, a permanent pose 
But soft as a kitten's, graceful as a gazelle's 
Impatience for swiftness, light on the toes 

And so waking again on an early morning 

While the air from the window is cool, so cool 

The years have passed I have thought to save 

From that time your picture, for you were the first of 

All my legendary people, first of the brave. 

Cairo t Junt> 



LIMB AND MIND 

The disingenuous 
Charm of living 
Has its advantages 
Properly using 
Lips for smiling, 
Grace for posture, 
Limbs for loving, 
Inimitable gesture. 

The thinker enjoys 
A lonelier quality, 
Learning's shyness 
With philosophy's pity, 
The buried city 

269 



JOHN WALLER 

Of Troy or Babylon 
Lost in antiquity, 
Though breathing on. 

Heart will answer 
For limb's liveliness, 
Brain will wonder 
In mind's timelessness. 
O frozen dress 
Or whirlwind hero, 
All gentleness, 
All lust like Nero? 

The ponderous question 
Cleaves the lives 
Of the moral rebel 
And the constant loves. 
So the limb strives 
To the mind's derision 
And the mind drives 
To the lovers' schism. 



Vernon Watkins 

THE MUMMY 

His eyes are closed. They are closed. His eyes are closed. 
His hands are clenched. They are clenched. His hands arc 

clenched. 
The messenger comes. The letters are disciplined; they are 

disposed. 
The black light quivers. Earth on Earth is avenged. 

270 



VERNON WATKINS 

What has left music fast in the sockets of bone? 

Had all been pattern, images sight had seen, 

Blood would lie quiet, but something strokes the light, and 

a groan 
Of great-rooted calm repels those images: nothing they mean. 

Nothing here lives but the music in the eyes. 

Hunting-scene, warriors, chariot, palm and wing 

Bid the blood rest, thought perch where the time-bird sings 

or flies, 
Year chasing year, following and following. 

But tears wash these bones where parchments whisper to sand. 

Here a laid vase offers die flying stream. 

Sand darkening wakes a harp-string hidden, plucked by a blind 

hand, 
Crying this theme to the world, this world-surrounding theme: 

Valiant, alive, his voice pursued the lands, 

Ruled the white sea, held mountains in his keep. 

Leave him with delicate instruments formed for delicate hands; 

In this locked room of treasures let him who chose them sleep. 

I lean down, crying: "Touch me, lay hold on my Spring, 
Reach up, for I have loosened, tearing your skies, 
Fountains of light, ages of listening!" 
But the bound hands are folded, the fold its word denies. 

What shudder of music unfulfilled vibrates? 

What draws to a dust-grain's fall most distant stars? 

In the last taper's light what shadow meditates? 

What single, athletic shape never cast on wall or vase? 

271 



VttJKIMUIN WAJLJUm 

What shudder of birth and death? What shakes me most? 
Job his Maker answering, the Stricken exclaiming "Rejoice!" 
Gripping late in the shifting moment giant Earth, making 

Earth a ghost, 
Who heard a great friend's death without a change of voice. 



YEATS' TOWER 

Surely the finger of God that governs the stars 
And feels the flashed mystery of the moving world 
Stirring the waters to leaves in fold on fold, 
Now touches this, this long grass in the field: 
O under grass, O under grass, the secret. 

Surely the seed that stirs beneath this touch 

Hears in its ear the wand within the wind, 

The miraculous fire from which all years have waned. 

This, if it moves, must heal the martyr's wound: 

O under grass, O under grass, the secret. 

Surely from this the snow-white blood is blown; 
Gold marguerite's doom that never comes, comes soon. 
Dead saints, white clouds, they stop not near the shrine 
But cross the skeleton harp, the unplucked bone: 
O under grass, O under grass, the secret. 

Ivy entwined about the walls of pride 
Clings, where the tales of time in centuried scrawl 
Compass the delicate mind, the hand of skill 
Touching this fire that never formed a school: 
O under grass, O under grass, the secret. 

272 



VERNON WATKTNS 

The wired walls hold a castle of desertion. 
Already round the gate the nettle springs. 
Old, wily murmurs have usurped those songs. 
Sheer over this the kestrel ruin hangs: 
O under grass, O under grass the secret. 

Children pass by for whom a bell has chimed. 
Hunters pass by: for these a bell has tolled. 
Horns echo backward, but the tower deep-welled 
Hangs in the stream with all its woven scroll: 
O under grass, O under grass, the secret. 

THE MOTHER AND CHILD 

Let hands be about him white, O his mother's first, 

Who caught him, fallen from light through nine months' haste 

Of darkness, hid in the worshipping womb, the chaste 

Thought of the creature with its certain thirst. 

Looking up to her eyes declined that make her fair 

He kicks and strikes for joy, reaching for those dumb springs. 

He climbs her, sinks, and his mouth under darkness clings 

To the night-surrounded milk in the fire of her hair. 

She drops her arm, and, feeling the fruit of his lips, 

Tends him cunningly. O, what secrets are set 

In the tomb of each breath, where a world of light in eclipse 

Of a darkly worshipping world exults in the joy she gave 

Knowing that miracle, miracle to beget, 

Springs like a star to her milk, is not for the grave. 



273 



VBRNON WATKINS 

INFANT NOAH 

Calm the boy sleeps, though death is in the clouds. 

Smiling he sleeps, and dreams of that tall ship 

Moored near the dead stars and the moon in shrouds, 

Built out of light, whose faith his hands equip. 

It was imagined when remorse of making 

Winged the bent, brooding brows of God in doubt. 

All distances were narrowed to his waking: 

"I built his city, then I cast him out." 

Time's great tide falls; under that tide the sands 

Turn, and the world is shown there thousand-hilled 

To the opening, ageless eyes. On eyelids, hands, 

Falls a dove's shade, God's cloud, a velvet leaf. 

And his shut eyes hold heaven in their dark sheaf, 

In whom the rainbow's covenant is fulfilled. 

THE TURNING OF THE LEAVES 

Not yet! Do not yet touch, 
Break not this branch of silver-birch, 
Nor ask the stealthy river why it laves 
Black roots that feed the leaves. 

Ask first the flickering wren. 

He will move further. Ask the rain. 

No drop, though round, through that white miracle 

Will sink, to be your oracle. 

Not yet! Do not yet bend 
Close to that root so tightly bound 
Loosened by creeping waters as they run 
Along the fork's rough groin. 

274 



VERNON WATKINS 

Ask not the water yet 
Why the root's tapering tendrils eat 
Parched earth away that they may be 
Nearer the source those fibres must obey. 

Behind the bark your hands will find 

No Sycorax or flying Daphne faned 

And the brown ignorant water bindweed breeds 

Not caring there what brows it braids. 

Light in the branches weaves. 

Hard is the waiting moment while it waves, 

This tree whose trunk curves upward from the stream 

Where faltering ripples strum. 

See how it hangs in air. 
The leaves are turning now. We cannot hear 
The death and birth of life. But that disguise, 
Look up now, softly: break it with your eyes. 



Eithne Wilkins 



SPOKEN THROUGH GLASS 

Here the big stars roll down 

like tears 

all down your face; 

darkness that has no walls, the empty night 

that fingers grope for and are lost, 

is nightfall in your face. 

275 



EITHNE WILKINS 

The big stars roll, 

the glittering railway-line unwinds into the constellations. 

Over and under you the dark, 
in you the rocking night without a foothold, 
and no walls, no ceiling, 

the parallels that never meet, the pulses winding out to the 
stars. 

Night has no end. 

Light travelling from the stars is out 

before you ride along it 

with the black tears falling, 

falling, 

all fall down. 

THE DREAMERS AND THE SEA 

(from a cycle, "Parzival") 

The dreamers turn; 

their shoulders cast, grey mounds, a shadow 

on the other side, 

still pools of shadow in the retrogressive moon. 

Their dreams are in the fern; 

their watery dreams 

condense. 

So while the globe is losing speed 

sleep for all is melting of the ice age: 

life comes up in the unrolling mist 

out of the general sea. 

276 



EITHNE WILKINS 

Nor is it enough that man by night 

exhales a moister spirit and crawls out from his black body 

like a crocodile, towards his mother in that swollen sea. 

He has a difficulty of his own 

to take breaths deep enough of air: 

even by daylight, as he goes about on unrelenting earth, 

the serpent 

wrings him in the pit and calls him guilty. 

COCKCROW 

Oh swearing and telling 

is a tower falling 

that never reaches the ground; 

only the rising earth to meet us, and the rising wind. 

How fluttering from the fields awash these voices rise, 

these cries! 

and the idiot pigeons jumping about the stony room, 

where so much light is suspended in the gloom 

that there is no escape from reading what the message said, 

lifesize, 
and recognising everything by name. 

This is the tower of rescues that is reached too late. 
And what in the topmost storey every time is found 
I shall not drink tonight, 

but the strong tower floating in the gunmouth, in the flooded 
pool. 

For cradled in these cupped and echoing hands 
the gunman's head is lolling voiceless, all 
its reason gone; 

277 



EITHNE W1LKINS 



and finally the long view 

spreading through the skull 

into a mere at daybreak, and the drowned cockerels crow. 



AND ONLY OUR SHADOW WALKS WITH US 

(For Robert Graves) 

We who have no perfection but to die 

walk among sliding hills and crumpled grassland, 

feathery with premonitions of the open sea. 

And here some time, when thought hangs as a cloud 

motionless between the sun and self turned colourless, a wind 

arises; 

then the arm, severe and lonely, 
lifts like an apparition, turns the collar up. 

We cannot go again to our small house; 
nor is it likely we can reach the juggling sea with all its flames. 
Inaccurate, fragmentary, shrinking back from traces in the grass, 
the earlier footsteps and the patch where others or ourselves 

have lain 

some other century, with lark ascending we face the wind 
blowing backwards from the memory, hair streaming from 

the brow. 
For we have no completeness in ourselves, wandering between 

the cold sun and the wind, 
wandering between the shadow of our thought, 
the shadow, winged, hovering, 
and our doom etched out upon that grassland in enormous 

chalk. 



278 



. EITHNE WILKINS 

Here are bare hills; the curious sheep-track; stones. 

We are mere horizon, have no frontiers. 

Only the limits of our outstretched arms describe, 

in irony of helplessness, 

big love or angler's luck. 

ANABASIS 

(For Edmund Blunden) 

There is no sense in asking those who fought 

and that was in another country 

what they suffered, how they got that wound. 

Perhaps behind shut eyes they sometimes still experience 

the sliding rocks, the gaunt deserted coast, and night 

continually falling upon work unfinished and 

intolerable weight of arms. 

Or tire, without an explanation, of their duty now a servant, 

tireless; 

or they lust for some calamity, some bulk 
of new compulsion, 
secretly they might be glad of war renewed. 

Most, if you ask them for a reminiscence, 
will not understand. 

Only the plain man tells you it was not so bad. 
Most have forgotten how it was, 
unless in anecdote, fired off a harmless rocket 
for the children; 

and that reminds them of how far it was, that in the end 
arriving 

279 



EITHNE WILKINS 

their arrival did not seem a victory, they had forgotten also 
how to be astonished. 

None will get an answer from 

those who left pain behind them, like an emptied flask 

dropped useless in a ditch, 

so travelling lighter, lean, with what simplicity of thirst. 

And those 

for whom the thing is dangerous always, 

the struggle still expanding, and the pain old-timer a colossus 

at the gate to every sea they enter, 

who know too well the battle line is always level with the eyes, 

however high they go, 

give answer merely: "Oh, we fought." 

and to the question whether, then, such things were hard, 

confess, laconically: 

"Hard." 



A HIGH PLACE 

They had a pocketful of stories that they told: 
how she was partly in another country, brighter than a stone, 
and how her mind was an unmanageable field 
rough with the shards and tools of other races; by a half- 
buried stream 
nettles across the grave-mounds fought the dazzling gorse. 

And the headless horseman galloped at full moon. 

Even in her height of summer, where no traveller came, 
hallucinations floated in her hair transparently, a swarm 
of bees. 

280 



EITHNE WILKINS 

And as these things were distantly reported, as a sigh of 

heat on grassland, 
the dandelion that has no shame 
airily looked through her hilltop eyes. 
Nor was v there any question if the stories all were true, 
hardly acknowledging how shadow mounted from the dale 
and whatever mists might hover in her speech, however 

soon night fell. 

Only a rumour hinted that the way was difficult to find, 
the climbing difficult across forgotten gloomy villages; 
and that on this peak, where on clear days one might have 

glimpses of the sea, 
no one could say what violence left an outline of uncertain 

skeleton, 

of some lost key, 

the site of palaces still unexplained, 
the vanished columns standing into air, the cloud of bees. 

At least she would have gladly in her turn abandoned this, 

flying out 
with the huge horseman riding fleshless on the air and out 

of time. 

To need no more of the crimson tortuous mouth; 
no more of those valleys sunk below the mind; and how, 

aloft, the wild hawks clashed. 

PASSAGE OF AN AUGUST 

In solitary august, like a story 

he met grief's lassie with the quartz-bright hands; 

and she became his darling, 

281 



EITHNE WILKINS 

who was young, was sorry 

there among the grasses blowing over pit and brands. 

She walked beside him back the way he came, 
into the whitening hills, and cut his throat. 
Although she called him by another name, 
she was no stranger, love. And none 
can drive her out. 

19)8 

BARBED WIRE 

The silence, with its ragged edge of lost communication, 

silence at the latter end, 

is now a spiked north wind. 

Last words 

toss about me in the streets, waste paper 

or a cigarette butt in some gutter stream 

that overflows 

from crumpled darkness. 

"Look, I am plunged in the midst of them, a dagger 

in their midst." 

and over the edge 

the nightmares peer, with their tall stories 

and the day's unheard-of cry. 

1940 



282 



EITHNE WILKINS 

FAILURE 

What can forgive us for 

the clothes left lying and the rocking journey, 
flashing poles and pylons standing into fields of air, 
in flooded fields? 

Something flew out of our hands, 

the cup incomplete, 

air of invasions and land of defeat. 

There was the tree felled in another valley, 

behind the flown carpet 

and nothing left to remember, all to forgive. 

Nothing to remember but 

the windows slammed against the cold, 

the helmet crushed down on the eyes. 



And who, beside the darkened station lamp, 
remembering, started back. 



SHARK'S FIN 

But what dark flag 

has thrown a shadow out ahead, 

fluttering on chalky ribs? 

However far we go, 

with our brown eyelids wrinkled 

from much looking out, with salty skin and bleaching hair 

stiff in the wind, that later dries 

above a tideline; 

283 



EITHNE WILKINS 

whatever exiles and high seas we call our own, 
still we can not shake off the whitening wake astern, 
the down-pull that would sift us gently, bone from bone; 

and how 

the lean shadow of another order continually follows, 

the unseen jars, the solitary pursuer. 

THE EYE 

I. THE EYE AS THE DESERT 

It is not you that move, but the running sand, 

and beyond, those fluid mountains, loaded range of light 

up-steepling through the skull. 

It is your shadow floating through the bones 

taken to be a journey, 

or ahead the precipice. 

This is the tall shadow dancing where the journey seemed to be 

and paints the lips still ghostlier, 

brilliant thirst, 

the shadow pouring away 

in mountains of light, cliffs, staggering waterfalls. 

Light curls on your lips 

and is the desert in the golden eye. 

The shadow, tangled in the imagined journey, 

clutched at flashes of the thorn, 

while light with its blaze of drums unfolding like a flower 

beats round the skull, 

284 



EITHNE WILKINS 

its trumpets growing longer as the note prolongs the moun- 
tains out of reach. 

The fingers slip in air, clash with the thornbush and the sand. 
The outstretched arms are locked in shadow. 

Yet 

light splashes 

even from the thin plant flowering at your feet, the crying 

flower 

with thorns, whose shadow glides 
out of the desert and blots out the sight of hills, 
darkens your thirst. 

2. THE EYE AS THE COAST 

Therefore climb down into this eye 

with all its seas, 

edge of the sea, grating of pebbles and sharp coast. 

This is your beginning, stiff sea-holly, 

thistles, 

here with your thought hard underfoot and hard in your eye. 

This is beginning: 

in the small round eye, the staring rock-pool. 

Light's centre heaps inside the twisting wave, 

the breaking moment is alone, running to light. 

Here darkness has solid arms, pulling and pulling down your 

head, 
a stone 
with fluttering lashes, 

285 



EITHNE WILKINS 

down here among rocks, on a loose wild beach 

beside an approaching tide that speaks with your own voice. 

Look, among rocks 

now wakes the hollow eye, a creeping fire. 
And like twilight there arises the person itself, 
and you feel this skull 
a fragile 
burden, a terror 
among dreams, 

Then the sea-winds ebb from your forehead, 
and the clotted hair 
streaks the shadowy face like blood: 
the body standing with the skin unbroken, 
blood with its unburst dams, and bones like towers about 
to fall. 

You are your own terror in the dream, 

a standstill. 

Look! the luminous tall one. 

3. THE THIRD BYE 

What hands are these upon your thorny shoulders? 
what rocks? what knives? 

In an empty shell 

the roaring of lost mountains roams at large 

among the rocks, the desert, and the waves. 



286 



EITHNE WILKINS 

VARIATIONS ON A THEME BY SIDNEY KEYES 

They said, It will be like snow falling. 

And the walls broke down, the soft air crumbled 

in our nostrils, flaked to nothingness 

between our fingers that were already half asleep. 

Then the hills mounted round our heads 

like pillows, and the cloudy sky 

was drawn up to our chins, there where we lay. 

For it was true, and there was snow 

falling, marking us out, the shadowy campaigners 

who had gone too far and having fallen sick, 

scrawled last words in the diary, in the fields of air. 

And so we lie half wrapped in snow, with lengthening bones, 

where so much light has filled the lantern jaws 

and leaves a dark stone in the eye. 

Whether it is the wandering of an unseen sun 

behind these falling clouds, or only darkness in the flooded 

eye, 

we guessed that it might come upon us so; and lie here 
under still unwritten sheets, a hatchet pointing 
through the drifts of time, this journey 
that perhaps we never should have gone 
through such snow falling, and so far from help. 



287 



George Woodcock 

WHITE 

White is the evening nature of my thought 
When neutral time that drains the night of green 
Flows through the dusk in mimic dawn of white. 

So pale the distance where blue morning shone 
Knits to the whitest crises of our stars, 
Burning the nightly ambience of alone, 

And evil evident of coloured hours 

Dies in this dark, whose sexless shapes of black 

Are only active in our twilight fears. 

For at day's death the whitest needs awake 
When seeping pallor undermines the night 
And white submerges all in evening lake, 

Where, as a lode attracting all time's light, 
You are white's evening nature of my thought. 

THE ISLAND 

The oars fell from our hands. We climbed the dark 
Slopes of kelp to the stairway up the rock. 

Scott went first, grasping the fraying rope. 
The rest of us followed, dragging the iron rack. 



288 



GEORGE WOODCOCK 

The crest was bare, but after scanty search 
In a bird's burrow we found the hunted man. 

His flesh was naked and hard as barren earth, 
His arms like scythes. His eyes spoke like a gun. 

Before him we retired, unmanned by fear. 

Unarmed, he seemed to move with harmful light. 
Scott only stood, shaming us in the end. 

The fugitive surrendered without fight. 

We laid him on the painful rack, stretched tight 
His limbs and bound his feet and wrists with wire, 

Set leaden weights upon his sunken chest 
And tied his head down by the matted hair. 

We turned the cranks and wrenched him hour by hour. 

In silence he endured. He would not speak 
Of the hidden ore. At last his joints burst out 

And jetting from the ruptures fire broke. 

Then lay before us on the rigid rack 
Straw limbs and a horse's polished skull. 

Gulls mocked as walked away across the sea 
The man we hunted but could not keep or kill. 

We threw the rack into the hungry surf 
And hacked the turf in anger with our swords. 

Then, re-embarking on our fruitless voyage, 
We left the island to the mice and birds. 



28 



GEORGE WOODCOCK 

MERTHYMAWR 

Sunday evening. The thick-lipped men binoculared 
Steal through the geometric groves of pines, 
Observing the steady and fatal hands of poachers 
And the young loving in wrinkles of the dunes. 

Grey in the wind sand tides against the turrets, 
And watchful sight is bridged towards the sea, 
Where silent the marram defends a wearing land 
And the seagulls climb like Junkers a plaster sky. 

The air is alive with voices, the loving whisper, 
The rodent screams at neck-constricting hand, 
Gulls' earthless wail and dank watchers' laughter. 
Always the wind whistles through teeth of sand. 

Night falls on the lovers, marram and voices. 
Dark hinders eyes, yet aids the brutal hand. 
Watchers depart, but the snares are filling. 
Wind dries the blood on the moving sand. 



IMAGINE THE SOUTH 

Imagine the South from which these migrants fled, 
Dark-eyed, pursued by arrows, crowned with blood, 
Imagine the stiff stone houses and the ships 
Blessed with wine and salt, the quivering tips 
Of spears and edges signalling in the sun 
From swords unscabbarded and sunk in brine, 
Imagine the cyclamen faces and yielding breasts 
Hungered after in a dead desert of icy mists, 

290 



GEORGE WOODCOCK 

Imagine, for though oblivious, you too are cast 
Exile upon a strange and angry coast. 

Going into exile away from youth, 

You too are losing a country in the south, 

Losing, in the red daylight of a new shore 

Where you are hemmed by solitude and fear, 

The loving faces far over a sea of time, 

The solid comfort and the humane dream 

Of a peaceful sky, the consoling patronage 

And the golden ladder to an easy age, 

All these are lost, for you too have gone away 

From your Southern home upon a bitter journey. 

There is no home for you marked on the compass. 
I see no Penelope at the end of your Odysseys, 
And all the magic islands will let you down. 
Do not touch the peaches and do not drink the wine, 
For the Dead Sea spell will follow all you do, 
And do not talk of tomorrow, for to you 
There will only be yesterday, only the fading land, 
The boats on the shore and tamarisks in the sand 
Where the beautiful faces wait, and the faithful friends. 
They will people your mind. You will never touch 
their hands. 

SONNET 

Looking into the windows that doom has broken 
Where the vague star illumines death and dust 
And the shadows of actions whose ends are forsaken 
Stir under the falling walls, senile and lost, 

291 



GEORGE WOODCOCK 

And looking into the doorways where unspoken names 
Shine and disintegrate on the rotting plaques, 
Surviving their owners who have left like dreams, 
Sinking into the past as sea-sucked wrecks, 

Remember, stranger, that here men grew and worked, 

Loved and were angry, and in general lived 

Peaceable lives till one day, spitted on their brothers' knives, 

Stuck to the curdling heart by nails they loved, 

They died in horror and their towns were left, 

And rotted, buried under the dust and leaves. 

TREE FELLING 

The bright axe breaks the silence in the wood, 
The ivory chips spray over crushed nettles, 
And the red slender pine sways and totters 
Shuddering its boughs in the chill of death. 

All down the hill the yellow teeth of stumps 
Stud the tramped moss and broken willow herb; 
The piled long bolls point northward to the Pole, 
Their fragrant lymph seeping from broken veins. 

Borne away in the blue wake of tractors, 
The lopped trees leave for ever their fitting landscape; 
They will grow again in the underground valleys 
Where the black miners creep beneath a sagging sky. 

And here the ploughs will traverse, as in Carthage 
Marking the end of a kingdom, the day of the squirrel 
And the blue jay shattering along the mossed valleys 
Between the still pines. The silence of felted needles 

292 



GEORGE WOODCOCK 

Breeding its ugly toadstools and sick brown orchids, 
Has ended its seeming permanence. Cyclic transition 
Will reign on the hillside, with its bare and ice-baked winters, 
And its multitudinous summer under the whispering corn. 

POEM FROM LONDON, 1941. 

The fading whistles outline our broken city 
Against the dead chart and distant zodiac, 
Against the decaying roads, empty and perilous, 
That join our exile with the land we seek. 
Kissed onward by the pistol, we all are exile, 

Expatriate, wandering in the illusive streets 
Of faked identity, which swing towards a past 
That is no Indies regained by circuitous sea routes. 

The bridges are down, the visas are invalid; 
We cannot turn on our tracks away from fate. 
I stand at the 'phone and listen in to death, 
And dare not stuff my ears and riug off hate. 

Yet I behold an angel like a falcon 
Bearing a speaking flame across the dark 
To sing in the dumb streets of cretin children 
For the silly hearts that cannot even break. 

And under the windows of a drunken pub 
A man sits, listening, like a wind-squat tree, 
Unnamed, his face a map of paper, his bone hands 
Moulding from the burning voice a phoenix day. 



293 



GEORGE WOODCOCK 

SUNDAY ON HAMPSTEAD HEATH 

Underfoot on the hill the water spurts 

Thickly out of the brilliant matted grasses 

Where the slopes fold in groins and thighs of earth 

And the winter sunlight in thin golden masses 

Falls through the lunging wind that swings the skirts 

Of the girls walking with their soldiers over the heath. 

A group of dwarf fir trees marks the crest 

With boughs like drowners' hands that claw the sky. 

Far down the slope a white springboard rears 

Its gaunt and skeleton frame above the grey 

Tossed pool where in summer the divers raced 

But where now only the ducks bob, resting their oars. 

Leaning their weight on London, the smoky roofs 
Below the hill stretch out their infinite folds, 
A stony sea, far in miasmic depth 
Where men sleep out their empty dreams of deeds, 
And towers and domes, surging like green reefs, 
Rise up heroic and powerful in their sloth. 

Here on the hilltop my friends and I sit down. 

They talk of prison; the conversation falls 

And I say, "One evening we must drink at the Spaniard's/' 

I do not know what they are thinking as their heels 

Kick out the turf and their gaze creeps over the scene, 

Peering through the smoke for the customary landmarks. 

But, going away in my mind from their shut faces, 
Away from the quiet hilltop and the leisurely men 
Digging their new gardens below in the little valley, 

294 



GEORGE WOODCOCK 

I enter the forest of rooftops and, under the grimy stone, 

Walk among the pipedreams of men in braces 

Reading in Sunday newspapers the end of faith and folly. 

And in the broken slums see the benign lay down 
Their empty, useless love, and the stunted creep, 
Ungainly and ugly, towards a world more great 
Than the moneyed hopes of masters can ever shape. 
In the dead, grey streets I hear the women complain 
And their voice is a spark to burn the myth of the state. 

And here where my friends talk and the green leaves spurt 
Quietly from waterlogged earth, and the dry twigs bud, 
I see a world will rise more lovely than Blake 
Knew in his winged dreams, and the leaves of good 
Will burst on branches dead from winter's hurt, 
When the broken rise and the silent voices speak. 



David Wright 

WALKING TO DEDHAM 

(To Kristin} 

Lean your small head against the Spring, 

That what's abundant of the year 

May be promised by the plum 

Orchards which all together seem to wear 

The frock of winter; lean 

Your face toward the forehead of the year, 

To the fresh fields pebbled with many flowers, 

Scattered upon a Summer's littoral. 

295 



DAVID WRIGHT 

Landscape and region of a dream, 

Seen from a visionary hill 

Between two seasons Spring 

And Summer, when the world becoming real, 

Its obverse face of pain, 

Of death, and of indifference to ill, 

Slowly unveils; but at this season 

Dazzles the skeleton with thick petals. 

What winds there, and what flowers blow 

Over the acreage of peace, 

Streams that through orchards flow, 

Bowed with their bloom as heavy as a fleece, 

The frank of winter, now 

Surround you in the central folds of peace 

No certain hurt of the hovering hours 

Or grief may pierce, or falling, seem to fall. 



John Bate 

COLOGNE 

To-day my heart is heavy 
with the sorrows of Cologne, 
the city reaps the bitter 
harvest its enemies have sown, 
and I, that enemy, am 
consumed with their bitterness. 

How can the June sun shine 
adding its pitiful glory 

296 



JOHN BATE 

to the cruel glare of the flames, 
casting shadows with a jagged line, 
this page of the city's story 
lighting, which is dark with shames. 

The dry confetti blossoms 

in this village street, where tramp 

off-duty airmen, lie like the sun's 

small, coloured tears, and here 

where Cologne is a word city, 

articulated in the cultured drone 

of radio announcers, thinking 

they have news to match the gospel, 

but sounding in their voice no pity, 

our hardened, revengeful will, 

of which mine is a part, will suffer, 

for the victor cities always discover, 

unaware of it before it grows, 

the interacting sorrow of their foes. 

June 1942. 



Audrey Beecham 

EXILE 

A wind like this tonight 

For such a one: 

To clutch his throat 

And bind with ice-thongs tight. 

297 



AUDREY BEE CHAM 

A shower of pointed stones 

To cover him 

Where he may fall 

A pall to grind his bones. 

Or he one night be shown 

An empty town, 

In endless rain 

To wander there alone: 

And pass the churchyard wall 
And see inside 
The long-extended arms 
Of the dead, stretched wide. 



George Bruce 

KINNAIRD HEAD 

I go North to cold, to home, to Kinnaird, 

Fit monument for our time. 

This is the outermost edge of Buchan. 

Inland the sea birds range, 

The tree's leaf has salt upon it, 

The tree turns to the low stone wall. 

And here a promontory rises towards Norway, 

Irregular to the top of thin grey grass 

Where the spindrift in storm lays its beads. 

The water plugs in the cliff sides, 

The gull cries from the clouds 

This is the consummation of the plain. 

298 



GEORGE BRUCE 



O impregnable and very ancient rock, 
Rejecting the violence of water, 
Ignoring its accumulations and strategy, 
You yield to history nothing. 



Francis Douglas Davison 

BOUGHT 

Fine rays of praise my asking rings from her 

rose and the dying warrior can do 110 more 

at night on frosty plains 

to satisfy the heart's desire 

creation's bloom on dying things admire 

the fire down empty corridors the black night makes 

incarnate in the strength that sleeps it 

so dies like days in emblems pressed 

on mortal thoughts and fears which follow them 

if pity finds a heart and fills the hunger. 

Her nature drawn in smiles 

not merely wished or guessed 

miles after hours I strove to hold the essence frozen 

only she dimmed and gave my gaze to remember 

empty hands on the counter fold, unfold 

in thoughts' weave rest unrest. 



299 



James Kirkup 

MORTALLY 

The garden cannot move. 

The terraces are sunken 

invisibly in snow 

the balustrades are there 

whoever leans on them will fall into the bay 

open the windows and the flowers 

will disappear or else 

geraniums alone remain. 

The lawns at evening bifurcate 

and grow into a woman with a grass 

grave for the outline of her body, 
i 

The dead that lay along the branches of an orchard 
creep into the season's river 
and the ruin. 

LA BETE HUMAINE 

The trains of thought 

meet generally speaking 

bifurcation revelation 

Soupault said and Zola never saw... 

'les mecaniciens des locomotives ont des yeux blancs' 

and wrote it in his head. 

Certainly the enginedrivers 

or the ones I mean have statuary eyes. 

They show them to you sometimes at a terminus. 

300 



Paul Potts 

JEAN 

There is a wild flower growing 

Inside a broken vase, 

On a mantle in rny memory. 

This flower will die 

When you are dead, 

And while you live will grow. 

Because each petal and its stem 

Is like long years, of waiting and of hope, 

So useless and so void. 

Julian Orde 

THE CHANGING WIND 

Past my window runs a tree, 
All the leaves are in my room, 
A shiver of water passes over. 
There is no stillness ever again. 
I saw the table break in three, 
I saw the walls cascading down, 
I saw the hard hair of my lover 
Drift out upon the flowing green. 
I saw the clove dark enemy 

301 



JULIAN ORDE 

Stare from the bed where I had lain, 
I saw my face in hers to be. 
There is no stillness ever again. 

Sun and wind had come for me 
What is my house but a flight of wings ? 
A flight of leaves, a flutter of rain, 
A sidelong slipping of light in rings? 

And now a scream possesses me 
Too high to hear, yet can I hear it; 
And now transfixed upon a pain, 
Too thin to feel yet must I bear it 
This scream, this pain, they are not mine, 
Water and air is all I am, 
A tree has shaken the staircase down 
Then what has rustled and entered in? 

I knew the other ones had come. 
I knew my heart was theirs to claim. 
I felt the millions in my room. 
There is no being alone again. 



BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 



LOUIS ADEANE was born in 1922, and his education was "self-imposed.** 
He is an anarcho-pacifist and was a Conscientious Objector in WorldWar 
II. He has worked at a wide variety of jobs, and has published articles and 
"poems in Now and numerous other magazines. He has published one book 
of verse, The Night Loves Us. 

KENNETH ALLOTT is a lecturer in English Literature at Liverpool 
University. He was born in 1912, educated at Durham and Oxford, and 
has worked as a journalist, schoolmaster and tutor. He is married and has 
two children. He has published three books, Poems, The Ventriloquist's 
Doll (poems) and Jules Verne, a biography. He is now at work on a study 
of Matthew Arnold. 

GEORGE BARKER was born in 1913 and was educated at Marlborough 
Public School. He is one of the founders of the contemporary Romantic 
movement, and has published two books of prose and seven of verse. In 
the United States he is published by The Macmillan Company, except for 
his Sacred and Secular Ulegies with New Directions. 

JOHN BATE is a young Catholic poet and is editor of Leaven. He was 
educated in Birmingham, and during the War was a pacifist and worked 
in a Bomb Disposal Squad. He has published little, lives on a farm, and 
is married. 

JOHN BAYLISS was born in 1919. While at Cambridge he was literary 
editor of the Gran/a. He served in the RAF during the War. He has 
published two books of verse and a novel. 

AUDREY BEECHAM is a niece of the conductor. She was educated at 
Oxford, where she now lives. 

ALISON BOODSON is now a physician at University College Hospital, 
London. She was born in 1925, and received the '"usual English liberal 
education." Her first poems were written at the age of sixteen and pub- 
lished in Poetry London. 

GEORGE BRUCE is a Scottish poet. He was born in 1909, lives in 
Buthan, and has published one book, Sea Talk. 

BRENDA CHAMBERLAIN lives in Wales, where she was born. She 
studied painting at the Royal Academy School. She works at her painting 
and writing on an island oHf the Welsh coast or in a mountain cottage on 
the mainland. She is a skier and mountaineer. 

ALEX COMFORT was born in London in 1920, and educated at High- 
gate School and Trinity College, Cambridge. A physician, he is now enga- 
ged in private practice, research and lecturing in physiology at the London 
Hospital. He is the author of several books of prose and verse, two of 
which, The Power House, a novel, and Song of Lazarus, poems, have been 

305 



BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 

published in the United States by The Viking Press. His most recent 
work is The Novel and Our Time. 

FRANCIS DOUGLAS DAVISON was born in 1919 and educated at 
Cambridge. He has lived much in France, and his work was represented 
in Atlantic Antology. 

KEITH DOUGLAS was born in 1920 and educated at Christ's Hospital 
(a public School) and Oxford. He was killed in Normandy. Since his 
death Poetry London has published two books, Alamein to Zem-Zem t and 
BSte Noire. 

ADAM DRINAN is a Scottish poet. He has published four books of verse, 
Men of the Rocks, Ghosts of the Stratb y Women of the Happy Isle and The 
Macpbails of London. 

LAWRENCE DURRELL was born in 1912 and educated at St. Edmund's 
School in Canterbury. He settled in Corfu but was driven out by the War, 
after which he worked for the British Ministry of Information in Alexan- 
dria and later in Rhodes. He returned to England in 1947. He has published 
several books including The Black Book and Prosperous Cell. While in Egypt 
during the War, he edited the magazine and anthology Personal Landscape. 
In the United States he was published by Reynal and Hitchcock, and The 
Black Book is announced by Circle. 

PATRICK EVANS was born in 1913 and educated at Oxford. During 
the War he served in the Tank Corps and also as a parachutist. He lived 
in Greece for four years, is married, and a book of his verse is about to be 
published by Poetry London. 

GAVIN EWART served in the Army during the War. He was born in 
1914 and was educated at Wellington and Cambridge. He has published 
one book of verse. 

G. S. FRASER was born in 1915 in Scotland. He served as a Sergeant- 
Major in the British Army during the War. He has published two books 
of verse and has also translated Patrice de la Tour du Pin's La Vie Recluse 
en Poe'sie. He has written a book about South America soon to be pub- 
lished by The Harvill Press, and has translated poems of Neruda. 

ROY FULLER is a lawyer with a practice in London. He was born in 
1912, is married and has one child. During the War he served in the Royal 
Navy. He has published two books of verse. 

WREY GARDINER was born in Plymouth in 1901. He is an editor of 
Poetry Quarterly and chairman of Grey Walls Press. He has published sever- 
al books, including The Gates of Silence and The Dark Thorn. 

ROBERT GARIOCH, born in 1909, is a Scottish poet. He has published 
one book, // Poems for Sixpence. 

306 



BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 

DAVID GASCOYNE is now living in Paris, and was one of the first 
English poets to be influenced by Surrealism. He was bom in 1916. He is 
the author of Opening Day, A Short Survey of Surrealism, Man's Ufe is This 
Meat, Hoelderlin Poems 19)7-42, published by Poetry 'London. 

W. S. GRAHAM was born in 1917. He is one of the youngest and most 
independent Scottish poets. During the War he worked as an engineer in 
England. In 1947 he won an Atlantic Award in Literature, and last year 
he came to America and taught at New York University. He is the author 
of Seven Journeys, 2nd Poems, and Cage Without Grievance . 

JOHN HEATH-STUBBS was born in London in 1918, and was educated 
at Queens College, Oxford. He has published four books, including a 
translation of the poems of Leopardi, with New Directions. His poems 
will be published in the United States by William Sloane. 

J. F. HENDRY is now in Vienna as a member of the British Control 
Commission. He was born in Glasgow in 1912. He was one of the found- 
ers of Apocalypse, and edited the Apocalyptic anthology The White 
Horseman with Henry Treece. He has published two books of verse, and 
has long been active in the Scottish Renascence. 

RAYNER HEPPENSTALL is now a feature producer at the BBC. 
He was born in 1911 in Yorkshire, and was educated there and in France. 
He spent four and a half years in the Army during the War. He is married 
and has two children. He has published three books of poems, now gath- 
ered in Collected Poems, two novels, The B/a^e of Noon and Saturnine, and 
two books of criticism, Apology for Dancing and The Dottble Image. 

NIGEL HESELTINE was bom in 1916 in North Wales. He is now a 
medical student in Dublin, and is also studying psychoanalysis and crimin- 
ology. Formerly he worked in the theater and as a journalist. He has 
published two volumes of verse, a travel book on Albania, translations 
of Welsh poetry, a book of short stories, and a translation of Buchner's 



SEAN JENNETT was born in 1912. He began writing at the age of six, 
and printed his own works at eight, and has been a writer and printer or 
publisher ever since. He is now a director and designer for Grey Walls 
and Falcon Presses. He has published a book on typography, and two 
books of verse, Always Adam and The Cloth of Flesh. 

GLYN JONES is a schoolteacher in South Wales. During the War he 
was a Conscientious Objector. He has published one book, Poems. 

SIDNEY KEYES was born in 1922 and was killed in Tunisia in 1942. 
He was educated at Oxford. Before he died he had published one book, 
Collected Poems. He is published in America by Henry Holt & Company. 

JAMES KIRKUP is a schoolteacher. Before the War he lived for many 
years in France. During the War he worked on the land as a Conscientious 

307 



BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 

Objector. He has done a considerable amount of translation from the 
French and is at present engaged in translating Pierre Jean Jouve. 

LAURIE LEE was born in 1914, and spent some years in Spain before 
the Civil War. He has recently been published in New York by Double- 
day & Company. 

DEMISE LEVERTOV was born in 1923. Her father is a Russian Jew 
who became an Anglican theologian; her mother is Welsh. She studied 
Russian ballet from the age of twelve to sixteen. During the War she 
served for four years as a hospital nurse, and she has worked in various 
odd jobs such as land girl, charwoman, children's nurse and companion 
to an alcoholic. She has published one book of verse, The Double Image. She 
recently married an American G. I. and hopes to come to the States. 

ALUN LEWIS was born in Wales in 1915 and died in Burma in 1944. 
He published two books of verse, Raider's Dawn and Ha! Ha! Amongst 
the Trumpets^ and one of short stories, The Last Inspection. He is published 
by Macmillan in the United States. 

EMANUEL LITVINOV states that he is no relation to the late, or 
mislaid, Maxim. He was born in 1915 and went to school "until fourteen 
but for all purposes uneducated." He spent six years in the British Army, 
is married and has one daughter. He has published two books, The Un- 
tried Soldier and A. Crown for Cain. 

NORMAN McCAIG teaches school in Scotland. He was born in 1910. 
He has published two books of verse, Far Cry and The Inward Eye. 

HUGH MACDIARMID (Christopher Murray Grieve) was born in Scotland 
in 1892. He was educated at Edinburgh University and served in World 
War I as a non-combatant in the Medical Corps. With R. B. Cunningham- 
Graham and Compton Mackenzie he founded the Scottish Nationalist 
Party, from which he was later expelled as a Communist. He was then 
expelled from the Communist Party for his Scottish Nationalism. He is 
the leader of the revival of serious verse in the Scottish vernacular, and 
has published many books of verse, one, recently, with Contemporary 
Poetry in Baltimore. 

SORLEY MACLEAN (in Gaelic, Somhairle MacGhill Eathain, pro- 
nounced Sorley Maclean) is one of the best poets of the Gaelic Revival. 
He has published one book of verse, Datn do Eimhir. 

JOSEPH GORDON MACLEOD was born in 1903. He was educated 
at an English Public School and University, and was called to the Bar 
but never practiced. He has worked as book reviewer, private tutor, 
actor, play producer, director, and from 1938 to 1945 as one of the best 
known BBC broadcasters. He has recently been touring Russia to study 
the Russian theater. He has published books of verse, criticism, fiction 
and autobiography, and has written plays and films. 

308 



BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 

CHARLES MADGE was born in Johannesburg in 1912 and was educated 
at Winchester and Magdalen College, Oxford. With Tom Harrison he 
founded Mass Observation, a sociological research movement. He once 
worked as a journalist and is now an editor of Pilot Press. 

OS MARRON was a young miner who died in 1946 of tuberculosis. 
Shortly before his death he was discovered and encouraged by Alex 
Comfort. His poems have appeared in Poetry Folios and Poetry Quarterly. 

WILLIAM MONTGOMERIE is a schoolteacher. He was born in 1904, 
is married, and as well as verse, writes short stories and criticism. He has 
just completed a study of Hamlet. 

NICHOLAS MOORE is the son of the philosopher G. E. Moore. He 
was born in 1918 and educated at Cambridge. He is married and has 
one daughter. He now works as a publisher and has edited a selection of 
American short stories. He is a prolific writer and has published several 
books of verse, two with Poetry London. 

DOUGLAS NEWTON was a Conscientious Objector during the War 
and worked on the land in Cambridgeshire. Since the War he has Worked 
in publishers' offices. 

NORMAN NICHOLSON was born at Millom, Cumberland, in 1914, 
and still lives there. He lectures for the Workers' Educational Association 
in the mining towns of Cumberland. In the United States he is published 
by Dutton's. 

JULIAN ORDE was born in 1919 and grew up in Paris and Chelsea. 
She was on the stage for six years, but now writes for films and radio. 

PAUL POTTS is Canadian by birth. He was educated at Stowe (England) 
anH spent much of his youth in Italy. He has published much of his own 
work on broadsheets which he used to sell on the streets. During the 
War be served in the Army Education Corps. He has published one book 
of verse, Instead of a Sonnet^ is working on a study of Sdone, and has 
written his autobiography, which will soon be published. 

F. T. PRINCE is published in London by Faber & Faber, and in New 
York by New Directions. 

KATHLEEN RAINE was born in 1908 and raised in Northumberland 
and London. She took a degree at Cambridge in Natural Sciences. In 
1944 she was received into the Roman Catholic Church. She has published 
two books of verse, Stone and Flower and Living in Time (Poetry London). 

HENRY REED is a critic, who has written notably on T. S. Eliot. 
His book of verse, A Map of Verona^ is published in America by 
Rcynal & Hitchcock. 

KEIDRYCH RHYS is one of the leaders of the Welsh Renascence. He is 
the son of a Welsh farmer. During the War he served as an anti-aircraft 

309 



BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 

gunner, but was invalided and went to work at the Ministry of Infor- 
mation. He is the editor of Wales. 

ANNE RIDLER was once secretary to T. S. Eliot. She was born in 1912, 
is married and has two daughters. She has published three books of 
verse and edited the L,ittle Book of Modern Verse (Faber). 

LYNETTE ROBERTS was born in Buenos Aires of Welsh parents and 
educated in French and Spanish convents. She is married to Keidrych 
Rhys. 

W. R. RODGERS was born in 1909 in Northern Ireland. For twelve 
years he was a country parson in Ireland, and he is now with the BBC. 
He has published one book of verse, Awake ; which also appeared in the 
United States, with Harcourt Brace & Co. 

D. S. SAVAGE was born in 1917 of "lower middle class parents." He 
worked for several years at an assortment of ill-paid jobs, is married and 
has four children. During the War he was a Conscientious Objector. He 
now lives in Cornwall where he and his wife run a guest house. He 
has published two books of verse and one of criticism. 

FRANCIS SCARFE was born in 1911 and educated at Durham Univer- 
sity, Cambridge and the Sorbonne. He worked as Supervisor in French at 
Trinity College, Cambridge, and as Assistant at the College Chaptal, 
Paris. During the War he served in the Army. He is the author of Appas- 
sionata (poems), and Auden and After (criticism), and has also translated 
L*es Chants de Maldoror and Pierre Emmanuel's poems for Poetry London. 

SIDNEY GOODSIR SMITH was bom in 1915 in Scotland. One of the 
most interesting of the younger poets writing in Doric, he has published 
three books of verse, Skatt Wind, The Wanderer and The Deevil*s 



WILLIAM SOUTAR was born in 1898. Soon after taking his M. A. 
at Edinburgh University he became paralyzed and spent the rest of his 
life bedridden, hardly able to move. His bedroom, with a great window 
overlooking a garden, was equipped with various devices to make it 
possible for him to live and work and read. Before his death in 1943 
he wrote an immense mass of poetry, now reduced to one volume, 
Selected Poems. 

BERNARD SPENCER works with The British Council in Turin. He 
was assistent editor of New Verse, and during the War lectured at Juad 
University in Cairo. His book Aegean Islands has just been published in 
New York by Doubleday. 

STEPHEN SPENDER has been teaching at Sarah Lawrence College, 
near New York. He was born in 1909, and educated at Oxford. Before 
the War he spent several years in Germany, an experience which con- 
siderably influenced his work. He is married and has one child a son. 
In the United States he is published by Random House. 

310 



BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 

DEREK STANFORD was born in 1918 and educated at Latymer. 
During the War he worked on the land as a Conscientious Objector. 
He has published two books, A. Romantic Miscellany (verse, with John 
Bayliss), and The Freedom of Poetry (anthology). With David West he edits 
the magazine Resistance, and he is at work on a translation of Apollinaire, 
a collection of modern French poetry, and a new book of poems. 

JULIAN SYMONS is now working as a copy writer for an advertising 
agency and is writing a biography of his brother, A. J. A. Symons. He 
was born in 1912; during the War he served in the Royal Armoured Corps. 
He is the author of two books of verse, and the founder and editor of 
Twentieth Century Verse ; one of the liveliest verse magazines of the 1930*8. 
He has written two excellent detective novels, is an enthusiastic sportsman, 
and a critic of considerable importance. 

DYLAN THOMAS was born in Wales in 1914, and educated at the 
Swansea Grammar School. He is the subject of a book by Henry Treece, 
soon to be published in London by Lindsay Drummond, and probably 
distributed in America by New Directions. His own first book of poems 
was called 18 Poems, published by The Parton Press. Later came The 
Map of Love which included both stories and verse, Portrait of The 
Artist As a Young Dog (autobiographical stories, in print, with New 
Directions) and most recently, Deaths & Entrances. His American vol- 
umes, The World I breathe and New Poems are now out of print, but 
New Directions has re-issued the bulk of their contents in its Selected 
Writings of Dylan Thomas volume, with introduction by J. R. Sweeney. 
Thomas worked at a number of jobs until he became interested in radio 
broadcasting and acting. He has a fine voice and is a remarkable reader 
of poetry, attracting much attention with his BBC programs. He has been 
working recently on a novel, and writing films scripts. 

TERENCE TILLER now works in the Features Department of the 
BBC. He was born in Cornwall in 1916 and educated at Cambridge. He 
has lectured at Fuad University, Egypt, and at Cambridge. He is married 
and has one daughter. 

RUTHVEN TODD is now living in the United States. He was born 
in Scotland in 1914. He has worked at various jobs and was in the ARP 
during the War. He has published three books of poems, two novels, a 
book of essays, and has edited Gilchrist's Life of Blake. 

HENRY TREECE is married, lives in Lincolnshire and breeds Old 
English sheep dogs. His Collected Poems, gathering the work of four 
previous volumes, were recently published in the United States by Alfred 
Knopf. He has also written How I See Apocalypse (essays), and Epilogue 
to Death (short stories) and a book on Dylan Thomas. With Stephan 
Schimanski he edits the personalist bi-yearly Transformation. In the War 
he served as a Flight Lieutenant in the RAF. 

3" 



BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES 

JOHN WALLER was born in 1917 at Oxford. He was educated at 
Weymouth College and Worcester College, Oxford, and edited the 
Oxford-Cambridge review, Fords and Bridges. Later he founded the literary 
quarterly Kingdom Come y one of the most influential periodicals of the 
first expression of the new Romanticism. He served as a Captain with 
the British Army in the Middle East during the War. 

VERNON WATKINS was born in Wales in 1906, and still lives there. 
He has published two books of verse, The Ballad of Mart Lllwyd and The 
Lamp and the Veil. A collection of his poems has recently been published 
in the United States by New Directions. He is a banker. 

EITHNE WILKINS was educated at Oxford. Her first poems appeared 
there just before the War, and in Roger Roughton's magazine Contemporary 
Poetry. She has since worked in publishing houses and as a translator. 

GEORGE WOODCOCK is one of the editors of Freedom and the founder 
and editor of AW. He has published two books of verse, The White 
Island and The Centre Cannot Hold and also a biography of William Godwin^ 
a study of Aphra Eehn, and a book on anarchism, Anarchy or Chaos. He 
has also written several pamphlets on housing, agriculture, railways, 
ethics, and other questions. 

DAVID WRIGHT was born in South Africa in 1920 and at the age of 
.seven became totally deaf. He was educated in South Africa and at Oriel 
College, Oxford. He is now working as a journalist. 

NOTE 

The most notable omission from this collection is the poet, Edwin Muir- 
He has been left out of the Scottish collection because he does not write 
in Scots and considers himself independent of the Scots Renascence. He 
is older than the poets writing in English who have been included in 
this volume, and moreover he is well represented in several available 
anthologies. 

GLOSSARY FOR PAGE 74 

(ghaisties - ghosts; airms - arms; mell - mix; timm - empty; ayont - be- 
yond; glunch - sneer; reek - smoke; creeshy - greasy; swat - sweat; grup 

- grip; alowe - below; loups - leaps; howe - hollow; wame - womb; 
sonsie - jolly; "The flesh be bruckle and the fiends be slee" - a quo* 
tation from Dunbar's Timor Mortis Conturbat Me; pree - prove; dree 

- dwindle; lauch - laugh.)