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Selected Poems

Page 4

by Edmund Blunden


  The primrosing and promise of good sport,

  Shut up the score book, laid the ribbands by.

  Such bodings mustered from the fevered sky;

  But now the spring well through the honeycomb

  Of scored stone rumbling tokened them near home,

  The whip-lash clacked, the jog-trot sharpened, all

  Sang Farmer’s Boy as loud as they could bawl,

  And at the Walnut Tree the homeward brake

  Stopt for hoarse ribaldry to brag and slake.

  The weary wildfire faded from the dark;

  While this one damned the parson, that the clerk;

  And anger’s balefire forked from the unbared blade

  At word of things gone wrong or stakes not paid:

  While Joe the driver stooped with oath to find

  A young jack rabbit in the roadway, blind

  Or dazzled by the lamps, as stiff as steel

  With fear. Joe beat its brains out on the wheel.

  Cloudy June

  Above the hedge the spearman thistle towers

  And thinks himself the god of all he sees;

  But nettles jostle fearless where he glowers,

  Like old and stained and sullen tapestries;

  And elbowing hemlocks almost turn to trees,

  Proud as the sweetbriar with her bubble flowers,

  Where puft green spider cowers

  To trap the toiling bees.

  Here joy shall muse what melancholy tells,

  And melancholy smile because of joy,

  Whether the poppy breathe arabian spells

  To make them friends, or whistling gipsy-boy

  Sound them a truce that nothing comes to cloy.

  No sunray burns through this slow cloud, nor swells

  Noise save the browsing-bells,

  Half sorrow and half joy.

  Night comes; from fens where blind grey castles frown

  A veiled moon ventures on the cavernous sky,

  No stir, no tassel-tremble on the down:

  Mood dims to nothing: atom-like I lie

  Where nightjars burr and yapping fox steps by

  And hedgehogs wheeze and play in glimmering brown;

  And my swooned passions drown,

  Nor tell me I am I.

  Mole Catcher

  With coat like any mole’s, as soft and black,

  And hazel bows bundled beneath his arm,

  With long-helved spade and rush bag on his back,

  The trapper plods alone about the farm

  And spies new mounds in the ripe pasture-land,

  And where the lob-worms writhe up in alarm

  And easy sinks the spade, he takes his stand

  Knowing the moles’ dark highroad runs below:

  Then sharp and square he chops the turf, and day

  Gloats on the opened turnpike through the clay.

  Out from his wallet hurry pin and prong,

  And trap, and noose to tie it to the bow;

  And then his grand arcanum, oily and strong,

  Found out by his forefather years ago

  To scent the peg and witch the moles along.

  The bow is earthed and arched ready to shoot

  And snatch the death-knot fast round the first mole

  Who comes and snuffs well pleased and tries to root

  Past the sly nose peg; back again is put

  The mould, and death left smirking in the hole.

  The old man goes and tallies all his snares

  And finds the prisoners there and takes his toll.

  And moles to him are only moles; but hares

  See him afield and scarcely cease to nip

  Their dinners, for he harms not them; he spares

  The drowning fly that of his ale would sip

  And throws the ant the crumbs of comradeship.

  And every time he comes into his yard

  Grey linnet knows he brings the groundsel sheaf,

  And clatters round the cage to be unbarred,

  And on his finger whistles twice as hard. –

  What his old vicar says, is his belief,

  In the side pew he sits and hears the truth

  And never misses once to ring his bell

  On Sundays night and morn, nor once since youth

  Has heard the chimes afield, but has heard tell

  There’s not a peal in England sounds so well.

  The Scythe Struck by Lightning

  A thick hot haze had choked the valley grounds

  Long since, the dogday sun had gone his rounds

  Like a dull coal half lit with sulky heat;

  And leas were iron, ponds were clay, fierce beat

  The blackening flies round moody cattle’s eyes.

  Wasps on the mudbanks seemed a hornet’s size

  That on the dead roach battened. The plough’s increase

  Stood under a curse.

  Behold, the far release!

  Old wisdom breathless at her cottage door

  ‘Sounds of abundance’ mused, and heard the roar

  Of marshalled armies in the silent air,

  And thought Elisha stood beside her there,

  And clacking reckoned ere the next nightfall

  She’d turn the looking-glasses to the wall.

  Faster than armies out of the burnt void

  The hourglass clouds innumerably deployed,

  And when the hay-folks next look up, the sky

  Sags black above them; scarce is time to fly.

  And most run for their cottages; but Ward,

  The mower for the inn beside the ford,

  And slow strides he with shouldered scythe still bare,

  While to the coverts leaps the great-eyed hare.

  As he came in the dust snatched up and whirled

  Hung high, and like a bell-rope whipped and twirled;

  The brazen light glared round, the haze resolved

  Into demoniac shapes bulged and convolved.

  Well might poor ewes afar make bleatings wild,

  Though this old trusting mower sat and smiled,

  For from the hush of many days the land

  Had waked itself: and now on every hand

  Shrill swift alarm-notes, cries and counter-cries,

  Lowings and crowings came and throbbing sighs.

  Now atom lightning brandished on the moor,

  Then out of sullen drumming came the roar

  Of thunder joining battle east and west:

  In hedge and orchard small birds durst not rest,

  Flittering like dead leaves and like wisps of straws,

  And the cuckoo called again, for without pause

  Oncoming voices in the vortex burred.

  The storm came toppling like a wave, and blurred

  In grey the trees that like black steeples towered.

  The sun’s last yellow died. Then who but cowered?

  Down ruddying darkness floods the hideous flash,

  And pole to pole the cataract whirlwinds clash.

  Alone within the tavern parlour still

  Sat the grey mower, pondering his God’s will,

  And flinching not to flame or bolt, that swooped

  With a great hissing rain till terror drooped

  In weariness: and then there came a roar

  Ten-thousand-fold, he saw not, was no more –

  But life bursts on him once again, and blood

  Beats droning round, and light comes in a flood.

  He stares and sees the sashes battered awry,

  The wainscot shivered, the crocks shattered, and nigh,

  His twisted scythe, melted by its fierce foe,

  Whose Parthian shot struck down the chimney. Slow

  Old Ward lays hand to his old working-friend,

  And thanking God Whose mercy did defend

  His servant, yet must drop a tear or two

  And think of times when that old scythe was new;

  And stands in silent grief,
nor hears the voices

  Of many a bird that through the land rejoices,

  Nor sees through the smashed panes the seagreen sky,

  That ripens into blue, nor knows the storm is by.

  The Poor Man’s Pig

  Already fallen plum-bloom stars the green,

  And apple-boughs as knarred as old toads’ backs

  Wear their small roses ere a rose is seen;

  The building thrush watches old Job who stacks

  The bright-peeled osiers on the sunny fence,

  The pent sow grunts to hear him stumping by,

  And tries to push the bolt and scamper thence,

  But her ringed snout still keeps her to the sty.

  Then out he lets her run; away she snorts

  In bundling gallop for the cottage door,

  With hungry hubbub begging crusts and orts,

  Then like the whirlwind bumping round once more;

  Nuzzling the dog, making the pullets run,

  And sulky as a child when her play’s done.

  Behind the Line

  Treasure not so the forlorn days

  When dun clouds flooded the naked plains

  With foul remorseless rains;

  Tread not those memory ways

  Where by the dripping alien farms,

  Starved orchards with their shrivelled arms,

  The bitter mouldering wind would whine

  At the brisk mules clattering towards the Line.

  Remember not with so sharp skill

  Each chasm in the clouds that with strange fire

  Lit pyramid-fosse and spire

  Miles and miles from our hill;

  In the magic glass, aye, then their lure

  Like heaven’s houses gleaming pure

  Might soothe the long-imprisoned sight

  And put the seething storm to flight.

  Enact not you so like a wheel

  The round of evenings in sandbagged rooms

  Where candles flicked the glooms;

  The jests old time could steal

  From ugly destiny, on whose brink

  The poor fools grappled fear with drink,

  And snubbed the hungry raving guns

  With endless tunes on gramophones.

  About you spreads the world anew,

  The old fields for all your sense rejoice,

  Music has found her ancient voice,

  From the hills there’s heaven on earth to view;

  And kindly Mirth will raise his glass

  With you to bid dull Care go pass –

  And still you wander muttering on

  Over the shades of shadows gone.

  Reunion in War

  The windmill in his smock of white

  Stared from his little crest,

  Like a slow smoke was the moonlight

  As I went like one possessed

  Where the glebe path makes shortest way;

  The stammering wicket swung.

  I passed amid the crosses grey

  Where opiate yew-boughs hung.

  The bleached grass shuddered into sighs,

  The dogs that knew this moon

  Far up were harrying sheep, the cries

  Of hunting owls went on.

  And I among the dead made haste

  And over flat vault stones

  Set in the path unheeding paced

  Nor thought of those chill bones.

  Thus to my sweetheart’s cottage I,

  Who long had been away,

  Turned as the traveller turns adry

  To brooks to moist his clay.

  Her cottage stood like a dream, so clear

  And yet so dark; and now

  I thought to find my more than dear

  And if she’d kept her vow.

  Old house-dog from his barrel came

  Without a voice, and knew

  And licked my hand; all seemed the same

  To the moonlight and the dew.

  By the white damson then I took

  The tallest osier wand

  And thrice upon her casement strook,

  And she, so fair, so fond,

  Looked out, and saw in wild delight

  And tiptoed down to me,

  And cried in silent joy that night

  Beside the bullace tree.

  O cruel time to take away,

  Or worse to bring agen;

  Why slept not I in Flanders clay

  With all the murdered men?

  For I had changed, or she had changed,

  Though true loves both had been,

  Even while we kissed we stood estranged

  With the ghosts of war between.

  We had not met but a moment ere

  War baffled joy, and cried,

  ‘Love’s but a madness, a burnt flare;

  The shell’s a madman’s bride.’

  The cottage stood, poor stone and wood,

  Poorer than stone stood I;

  Then from her kind arms moved in a mood

  As grey as the cereclothed sky.

  The roosts were stirred, each little bird

  Called fearfully out for day;

  The church clock with his dead voice whirred

  As if he bade me stay

  To trace with madman’s fingers all

  The letters on the stones

  Where thick beneath the twitch roots crawl

  In dead men’s envied bones.

  A Farm near Zillebeke

  Black clouds hide the moon, the amazement is gone;

  The morning will come in weeping and rain;

  The Line is all hushed – on a sudden anon

  The fool bullets clack and guns mouth again.

  I stood in the yard of a house that must die,

  And still the black hame was stacked by the door,

  And harness still hung there, and the dray waited by.

  Black clouds hid the moon, tears blinded me more.

  Festubert, 1916 [1916 Seen from 1921]

  Tired with dull grief, grown old before my day,

  I sit in solitude and only hear

  Long silent laughters, murmurings of dismay,

  The lost intensities of hope and fear;

  In those old marshes yet the rifles lie,

  On the thin breastwork flutter the grey rags,

  The very books I read are there – and I

  Dead as the men I loved, wait while life drags

  Its wounded length from those sad streets of war

  Into green places here, that were my own;

  But now what once was mine is mine no more,

  I look for such friends here and I find none.

  With such strong gentleness and tireless will

  Those ruined houses seared themselves in me,

  Passionate I look for their dumb story still,

  And the charred stub outspeaks the living tree.

  I rise up at the singing of a bird

  And scarcely knowing slink along the lane,

  I dare not give a soul a look or word

  For all have homes and none’s at home in vain:

  Deep red the rose burned in the grim redoubt,

  The self-sown wheat around was like a flood,

  In the hot path the lizards lolled time out,

  The saints in broken shrines were bright as blood.

  Sweet Mary’s shrine between the sycamores!

  There we would go, my friend of friends and I,

  And snatch long moments from the grudging wars;

  Whose dark made light intense to see them by …

  Shrewd bit the morning fog, the whining shots

  Spun from the wrangling wire; then in warm swoon

  The sun hushed all but the cool orchard plots,

  We crept in the tall grass and slept till noon.

  Third Ypres: a Reminiscence

  Triumph! How strange, how strong had triumph come

  On weary hate of foul and endless war

  When from its
grey gravecloths awoke anew

  The summer day. Among the tumbled wreck

  Of fascined lines and mounds the light was peering,

  Half-smiling upon us, and our newfound pride;

  The terror of the waiting night outlived,

  The time too crowded for the heart to count

  All the sharp cost in friends killed on the assault.

  No sap of all the octopus had held us,

  Here stood we trampling down the ancient tyrant.

  So shouting dug we among the monstrous pits.

  Amazing quiet fell upon the waste,

  Quiet intolerable to those who felt

  The hurrying batteries beyond the masking hills

  For their new parley setting themselves in array

  In crafty fourms unmapped.

  No, these, smiled faith,

  Are dumb for the reason of their overthrow.

  They move not back, they lie among the crews

  Twisted and choked, they’ll never speak again.

  Only the copse where once might stand a shrine

  Still clacked and suddenly hissed its bullets by.

  The War would end, the Line was on the move,

  And at a bound the impassable was passed.

  We lay and waited with extravagant joy.

  Now dulls the day and chills; comes there no word

  From those who swept through our new lines to flood

  The lines beyond? but little comes, and so

  Sure as a runner time himself’s accosted.

  And the slow moments shake their heavy heads,

  And croak, ‘They’re done, they’ll none of them get through.’

  They’re done, they’ve all died on the entanglements,

  The wire stood up like an unplashed hedge and thorned

  With giant spikes – and there they’ve paid the bill.

  Then comes the black assurance, then the sky’s

  Mute misery lapses into trickling rain,

 

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