All the Poems
Page 6
And made the people’s cattle graze on sand.
Ratted from many a pool and forced amalgamation
And dealt in shares which never had a stock exchange quotation.
Non flocci facio, I do not care
For wrongs you made the other fellow bear:
’Tis not for these unsocial acts not these
I wet my pen. I would not have you tease,
With a repentance smug and overdue
For all the things you still desire to do,
The ears of an outraged divinity:
But oh your tie is crooked and I see
Too plain you had an éclair for your tea.
It is this nonchalance about your person –
That is the root of my profound aversion.
You are too fat. In spite of stays
Your shape is painful to the polished gaze;
Your uncombed hair grows thin and daily thinner,
In fact you’re far too ugly to be such a sinner.
Lord Barrenstock and Epicene, consider all that you have done
Lord Epicene and Barrenstock, yet not two Lords but one,
I think you are an object not of fear but pity
Be good, my Lord, since you can not be pretty.
Maximilian Esterhazy
O Maximilian stern and wild
Wilt thou not look on me thy little child
Thy once so darling dear, so closely presst,
So cared for, so extravagantly dresst,
Raised up from nothing in thought to be
A furnished dwelling of felicity?
Now thou dost frown and all my walls descend
Like Jericho’s and there is a swift end
Of comely donjon and of crested tops
Of flying buttresses and decorated props.
O never castle in the hills of Spain
Was half so much of nothing as thy Jane,
When thou dost turn away and no more look,
She is a song unsung, an unwrit book.
What is the Time?
or
St Hugh of Lincoln
What is the time, my limber lad,
What is the time, I pray?
I am old and blind
And weak in my mind,
But what is the time of day?
He took the youth by his golden hair
He dragged him up a crooked stair
Never more was Hughie seen,
Be warned, my child, while the grass is green.
Major Macroo
Major Hawkaby Cole Macroo
Chose
Very wisely
A patient Griselda of a wife with a heart of gold
That never beat for a soul but him
Himself and his slightest whim.
He left her alone for months at a time
When he had to have a change
Just had to
And his pension wouldn’t stretch to a fare for two
And he didn’t want it to.
And if she wept she was game and nobody knew it
And she stood at the edge of the tunnel and waved as his train went through it.
And because it was cheaper they lived abroad
And did he care if she might be unhappy or bored?
He did not.
He’d other things to think of – a lot.
He’d fads and he fed them fat,
And she could lump it and that was that.
He’d several boy friends
And she thought it was nice for him to have them,
And she loved him and felt that he needed her and waited
And waited and never became exasperated.
Even his room
Was dusted and kept the same,
And when friends came
They went into every room in the house but that one
Which Hawkaby wouldn’t have shown.
Such men as these, such selfish cruel men
Hurting what most they love what most loves them,
Never make a mistake when it comes to choosing a woman
To cherish them and be neglected and not think it inhuman.
Private Means is Dead
Private Means is dead
God rest his soul,
Officers and fellow-rankers said.
Captive Good, attending Captain Ill
Can tell us quite a lot about the Captain,
If he will.
Major Portion
Is a disingenuous person
And as for Major Operation well I guess
We all know what his reputation is.
The crux and Colonel of the whole matter,
(As you can read in the Journal, if it’s not tattered)
Lies in the Generals, Collapse, Debility, Panic and Uproar,
Who are too old in any case
To go to the War.
Bereavement
Maria Holt
Was not the dolt
That people thought her.
Her face was full
Her mind was not dull
She was my daughter.
She had so much to do so very much
And used to shuffle round upon a crutch,
The younger children always called her mother,
And so she was to sister and to brother
Poor wretch she’s dead and now I am bereft
Of £60 each year to fill the place she left
I never paid a cent before; it is too bad,
It’s worse to lose a lass than lose a lad.
Death of Mr Mounsel
I am dying Egypt dying
Keep my watch and send word home
Never mind about the funeral
Just a simple coping stone
Manly virtue needs no bushel
Baby hands that cling and tear
Better twenty years of Kathy
Than the fiend’s own heart of fear
Solitude corrupting manners
Often has the tale been told
Memory paints a brighter pansy
Springing from the funeral mould
Let my grave with wrath no stranger
Visit not complaining come
Unmolested quit of danger
Quietly I slip hence and home
But when lights are glowing lower
Pressing downward through the gloom
And the porter shows the lady
To the first-class waiting-room
Then let every City Pretty –
You not least dear you not least –
Shed a tear for Mister Mounsel
Most unhappily deceased.
Who Killed Lawless Lean?
The parrot
Is eating a carrot
In his cage in the garret
Why is the parrot’s
Cage in the garret?
He is not a sage
Parrot: his words enrage.
Downstairs
In his bed
Lies the head
Of the family
He is dead.
And the brothers gather
Mutter utter would rather
Forget
The words the parrot
Said.
When high in his cage swinging
From the lofty ceiling
Sat the pet screaming:
‘Who killed Lawless Lean?’
It was not at all fitting.
So they put the parrot
In his cage in the garret
And gave him a carrot
To keep him quiet.
He should be glad they did not wring his neck.
Road Up
It seemed a curious place to rest one’s body and take one’s ease
Here in the very middle of Euston Road.
Now if it had been on the Thames’ green bank, under poplar trees,
But here the traffic instead of the water flowed.
It was a British working man who lay full length on his back
A
nd every now and then he turned and hit the road a thwack.
Was he dowser tapping for water I wonder,
Or was it a sudden spasm of rage that split his dreams asunder?
Mrs Osmosis
Mrs Osmosis
Is all right in small doses
Like what I was saying about Mrs Pale
There’s a tell-tale
And for why?
Cos I blacked her eye
Last Fri –
day.
It don’t sound natural to me
But they do say Mr P.
Well it all comes of her going with a fellow which ain’t hardly so to say
Not that he’d cause to worry, seeing it was that way.
The Fugitive’s Ride
Across the bridge across the dyke
Foresworn by friend and foe alike,
I ride
The field upon the further side
Stretches before me and its wide
Horizon dark against dark sky
Beckons me on. Dim homesteads lie
To left and right as I ride by.
It is a wet and steamy night,
More steamy night I have not seen,
More steamy night there has not been,
I have rode on for many a mile
And now it does not rain
And has not done for quite a while
And all the plain
Lies limpid underneath the stars
That give an eerie light
And make the plain seem to be bright.
With standing water, deep or shallow?
Deep lake, or river? Corn or fallow?
Lord, Lord, I cannot say
But warily I pick my way
This false starlight is worse than no light
To bewitch
The eyes and hide the gaping ditch.
What owl was that that howls upon
The trees athwart the stream
And have I been this way before
Or do I dream?
He seems to be a mournful one
That hoots to make a coward run
I hate to hear I hate to see
An owl that hoots so dismally
It makes my very blood run cold
No bird should dare to be so bold
I feel as fearful as he should
Who’s done a dreadful deed of blood.
(Now hold up horse a moment pray,
Don’t sidestep in that foolish way,
If you fall down upon the ground
There is a chance you will be drowned.)
A wetter plain I have not seen
A wetter plain there has not been
I say there has not been
A wetter plain
Since first I came
And may I die
If once again it does not rain.
In early dawn is this dark plain
Made darker still of darkness shorn
More dismaller but still the same
Lit by the ray that heralds day.
On my poor horse so lost so wan
That cannot understand
Why we must ride and ride and ride
And never yet come back home
On you must go until you drop
For since time won’t, I dare not stop.
Suburb
How nice it is to slink the streets at night
And taste the slight
Flavour of acrity that comes
From pavements throwing off the dross
Of human tread.
Each paving stone sardonic
Grins to its fellow citizen masonic:
‘Thank God they’re gone,’ each to the other cries
‘Now there is nothing between us and the skies’.
Joy at this state transports the hanging heavens
And down to earth they rain celestial dew
The pavement darkly gleams beneath the lamp
Forgetful now of daylight’s weary tramp.
Round about the streets I slink
Suburbs are not so bad I think
When their inhabitants can not be seen,
Even Palmers Green.
Nobody loves the hissing rain as I
And round about I slink
And presently
Turn from the sleek wet pavements to the utter slime
Where jerrybuilders building against time
Pursue their storied way,
Foundations and a pram,
Four walls and a pot of jam,
They have their sentries now
Upon a hundred hillocks.
Night watchman bad and old
Take rheumatism in exchange for gold.
Do you see that pub between the trees
Which advertises gin and cyclists’ teas?
Down there I know a lane
Under the padding rain
Where leaves are born again
Every night
And reach maturity
In a remote futurity
Before dawn’s light.
I have never seen
Anything quite so green
So close so dark so bright
As the green leaves at night.
I will not show you yet
Lest you should forget,
But when the time is come for your dismembering
I’ll show you that you may die remembering.
Beware the Man
Beware the man whose mouth is small
For he’ll give nothing and take all.
Breughel
The ages blaspheme
The people are weak
As in a dream
They evilly speak.
Their words in a clatter
Of meaningless sound
Without form or matter
Echo around.
The people oh Lord
Are sinful and sad
Prenatally biassed
Grow worser born bad
They sicken oh Lord
They have no strength in them
Oh rouse up my God
And against their will win them.
Must they lambs to the slaughter
Delivered be
With each son and daughter
Irrevocably?
From tower and steeple
Ring out funeral bells
Oh Lord save thy people
They have no help else.
The Blood Flows Back
The blood flows back behind my eyes
For fears I cannot recognise.
I stood upon the brink
And heard the clink
And clatter of my own thoughts.
Fear drove them on, the craven crew,
My soul was sick,
I knew it knew
For the first time
And saw
The thoughts that thronged its house
All fears and lies
All fears and craven subterfuge.
My soul was sick and wished to die.
Weeping its immortality
My soul stood there.
Ah me, ah me,
What use contempt and hate?
Myself is welded to a whole
And hidden thoughts must have their place
With Will and Soul.
Now Pine-Needles
Now pine-needles
You lie under the pine-trees
In the darkness of the pine-trees
The sun has not touched you
You are not brown because the sun has touched you
You are brown because you are dead.
The parent tree sighs in the wind
But it does not sigh for sadness
Only because the wind blows
The pine-tree sighs
Only because you are dead
You are brown.
Well, you do not know
That you were so and so
And are now so and so.
So why should I say
You
were alive and are now dead
That your parent tree sighs in the wind?
I will sleep on you pine-needles,
Then I shall be
No more than the pine-tree
No more than the pine-tree’s needles.
Portrait (1)
She was not always so unkind I swear
And keep this thought that’s all I have of her
Who was upon a time my only thought and care.
Sweet memory hid from the light of truth
I’ll keep thee, for I would not have thy worth
Questioned in Court of Law nor answer for it on my oath,
But hid in my fond heart I’ll carry thee
And to a fair false thought I’ll marry thee
And when thy time is done I’ll bury thee.
Louise
Why is the child so pale,
Sitting alone in that sawny way
On an upturned valise
In a suburban sitting-room?
Louise,
Can’t you give moma a smile?
Come and say How-do-you-do
To Mr Tease.
Why is the child so pale?
They have come overnight by rail
From Budapest;
Oh the poor child.
And the money has given out,
And they’ve telegraphed home for more,
And meanwhile they’re having to stay
In a small-beerish way
With Mr and Mrs Tease, as I have said,
Of Harringay Park, instead
Of having a comfortable bed
At the Ritz.
The child is pale and precocious,
She knows all the capitals of Europe,
She knows all there is to know about Wagons-Lits
And First Class accommodation,
But she has never been long enough in any nation
Completely to unpack:
Always her thoughts are centred
On the nearest railway station.
Moma and nurse and Louise
A hatbox, a trunk, a valise,
And one was lost at Marseille.
‘Oh if only I could stay
Just for two weeks in one place’
Thinks the child of the doleful face.
Moma has had a cup of tea,
She is feeling better
‘Cheer up, girlie’ she says
‘I’ve a letter here from your poppa,
It will take him some time to raise the bucks …
Shucks, child,
Go and help nurse unpack,
We’re here for two weeks at least
Then we leave for Athens and the Near East.’
In the suburban sitting-room
The poor child sits in a mazy fit:
Such a quick answer to a prayer
Shakes one a bit.
TENDER ONLY TO ONE (1938)
Tender Only to One
Tender only to one
Tender and true
The petals swing
To my fingering
Is it you, or you, or you?
Tender only to one
I do not know his name
And the friends who fall
To the petals’ call
May think my love to blame.
Tender only to one