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All the Poems

Page 12

by Stevie Smith


  When most against a loving friend he pressed.

  And now he walks with gun and roar –

  He is a colonel in the Indian Army –

  Sporting upon a tiger’s spoor

  And with him goes his faithful escort, Harmi.

  Oh Harmi dear I love the sun

  And all the crooked jungle path

  But most the water holes I love

  With creatures peering from above.

  Why do I pick the wilder animal?

  It is because he is not fanciful.

  I had a dog in England once,

  I loved him well, his name was Bunce,

  And now I think I see him here,

  And as I think, the scene grows clear,

  An English scene. The colonel sighed.

  The misty fells lay open wide

  Upon his loving thought,

  And dog Bunce ran again to start

  The timid hare, and play his part

  As he was taught.

  Wild creatures’ eyes, the colonel said,

  Are innocent and fathomless,

  And when I look at them I see

  That they are not aware of me,

  And oh I find and oh I bless

  A comfort in this emptiness.

  They only see me when they want

  To pounce upon me in the hunt.

  But in the tame variety

  There couches an anxiety

  As if they yearned, yet knew not what

  They yearned for, nor they yearned for not.

  And so my dog would look at me

  And it was pitiful to see

  Such love and such dependency.

  The human heart is not at ease

  With animals that look like these.

  The colonel paused and wiped his brow,

  He felt his words were too dramatic

  But as he knew no English they

  Were lost upon the Asiatic.

  Ah me, the bitter bitter love,

  Why must it be so bitter

  Or animal, or man, or tree –

  Would not no love be better?

  And still in recollection bound

  The Colonel gazed upon the ground

  It seemed his senses in a swound

  Had left him quite,

  Then turning to his gun again

  And stamping on his heavy pain,

  He loaded up and in the sight

  Beheld a tiger stepping bright.

  He steps so brightly to his death,

  The colonel shot him through the teeth.

  I had a dream I beat dear Bunce,

  He said, with many a weal

  Until he lay down at my feet

  All red from toe to heel

  Then in my dream I rose and fled,

  Crying, The dog, the dog is dead.

  Now, Harmi, mark, when daylight came,

  My night and dream to shatter through

  My dog came and so looked at me

  I said, Why, Bunce, what’s the matter with you?

  Oh day and night, oh Holy Dove,

  We slay the thing we most do love,

  And it is pitiful to see

  Our friends live but in memory.

  But they are safe in memory

  And are they not? the colonel said,

  He turned and looked at Harmi so

  That Harmi dropped his gun and fled.

  When he came back again he found

  The colonel dying of a wound,

  And crying close upon the ground:

  Oh bright bright blood that flows so bright

  Within the wound myself did make

  Oh jungle grass that drinks it up

  And with my life thy thirst doth slake

  Why has my hand this hour postponed

  That sees me now with dust conjoined?

  The Indian’s tears fell like a blot

  Upon the colonel’s face

  And carefully before he left

  He put his hands in place.

  Later upon the tomb, now grave now gay,

  He daily danced to keep the fiends away.

  ‘Oh stubborn race of Cadmus’ seed …’

  It is the bird of burial

  I invoke for my brother’s funeral.

  I throw the dust in Creon’s eyes

  Not my father is blind but my uncle is.

  And when they have killed me I shall stand in the Dark Hall

  And cry: Orcus, see that my sister does not suffer at all.

  The Ambassador

  ‘known also among the Phoenicians as Casmilus’

  LEMPIRÈRE

  Underneath the broad hat is the face of the Ambassador

  He rides on a white horse through hell looking two ways.

  Doors open before him and shut when he has passed.

  He is master of the mysteries and in the market place

  He is known. He stole the trident, the girdle,

  The sword, the sceptre and many mechanical instruments.

  Thieves honour him. In the underworld he rides carelessly.

  Sometimes he rises into the air and flies silently.

  Persephone

  I am that Persephone

  Who played with her darlings in Sicily

  Against a background of social security.

  Oh what a glorious time we had

  Or had we not? They said it was sad

  I was born good, grown bad.

  Oh can you wonder can you wonder

  I struck the doll-faced day asunder

  Stretched out and plucked the flower of winter thunder?

  Then crashed the sky and the earth smoked

  Where are father and mother now? Ah, croaked

  The door-set crone, Sun’s cloaked.

  Up came the black horses and the dark King

  And the harsh sunshine was as if it had never been

  In the halls of Hades they said I was queen.

  My mother, my darling mother,

  I loved you more than any other,

  Ah mother, mother, your tears smother.

  No not for my father who rules

  The fair fields of Italy and sunny fools

  Do I mourn where the earth cools.

  But my mother, I loved and left her

  And of a fair daughter bereft her,

  Grief cleft her.

  Oh do not fret me

  Mother, let me

  Stay, forget me.

  But still she seeks sorrowfully,

  Calling me bitterly

  By name, Persephone.

  I in my new land learning

  Snow-drifts on the fingers burning.

  Ice, hurricane, cry: No returning.

  Does my husband the King know, does he guess

  In this wintriness

  Is my happiness?

  Do Take Muriel Out

  Do take Muriel out

  She is looking so wan

  Do take Muriel out

  All her friends have gone.

  And after too much pressure

  Looking for them in the Palace

  She goes home to too much leisure

  And this is what her life is.

  All her friends are gone

  And she is alone

  And she looks for them where they have never been

  And her peace is flown.

  Her friends went into the forest

  And across the river

  And the desert took their footsteps

  And they went with a believer.

  Ah they are gone they were so beautiful

  And she can not come to them

  And she kneels in her room at night

  Crying, Amen.

  Do take Muriel out

  Although your name is Death

  She will not complain

  When you dance her over the blasted heath.

  The Weak Monk

  The monk sat in his den

  He took his mighty pen

  And wrote: ‘
Of God and Men’.

  One day the thought struck him

  It was not according to Catholic doctrine;

  His blood ran dim.

  He wrote till he was ninety years old

  Then he shut the book with a clasp of gold

  And buried it under the sheepfold.

  He’d enjoyed it so much, he loved to plod,

  And he thought he’d a right to expect that God

  Would rescue his book alive from the sod.

  Of course it rotted in the snow and rain,

  No one will ever know now what he wrote of God and Men.

  For this the monk is to blame.

  Le Singe Qui Swing

  to the tune of ‘Green-sleeves’

  Outside the house

  The swinging ape

  Swung to and fro,

  Swung to and fro,

  And when midnight shone so clear

  He was still swinging there.

  Oh ho the swinging ape,

  The happy peaceful animal,

  Oh ho the swinging ape,

  I love to see him gambol.

  Pad, pad

  I always remember your beautiful flowers

  And the beautiful kimono you wore

  When you sat on the couch

  With that tigerish crouch

  And told me you loved me no more.

  What I cannot remember is how I felt when you were unkind

  All I know is, if you were unkind now I should not mind.

  Ah me, the capacity to feel angry, exaggerated and sad

  The years have taken from me. Softly I go now, pad pad.

  The Broken Friendship

  ‘My heart is fallen in despair’

  Said Easter Ross to Jolie Bear.

  Jolie answered never a word

  But passed her plate as if she had not heard.

  Mrs Ross is took to her bed

  And kept her eye fixed on the bed-rail peg

  ‘When I am dead roll me under the barrow,

  And who but pretty Jolie shall carry the harrow.’

  Jolie Bear is gone away

  Easter Ross’s heart is broke,

  Everything went out of her

  When Jolie never spoke.

  ‘Duty was his Lodestar’

  a song

  Duty was my Lobster, my Lobster was she,

  And when I walked out with my Lobster

  I was happy.

  But one day my Lobster and I fell out,

  And we did nothing but

  Rave and shout.

  Rejoice, rejoice, Hallelujah, drink the flowing champagne,

  For my darling Lobster and I

  Are friends again.

  Rejoice, rejoice, drink the flowing champagne-cup,

  My Lobster and I have made it up.

  The Afterthought

  Rapunzel Rapunzel let down your hair

  It is I your beautiful lover who am here

  And when I come up this time I will bring a rope ladder with me

  And then we can both escape to the dark wood immediately.

  This must be one of those things, as Edgar Allan Poe says somewhere in a book,

  Just because it is perfectly obvious one is certain to overlook.

  I wonder sometimes by the way if Poe isn’t a bit introspective,

  One can stand about getting rather reflective,

  But thinking about the way the mind works, you know,

  Makes one inactive, one simply doesn’t know which way to go;

  Like the centipede in the poem who was corrupted by the toad

  And ever after never did anything but lie in the middle of the road,

  Or the old gurus of India I’ve seen, believe it or not,

  Standing seventy five years on their toes until they dropped.

  Or Titurel, for that matter, in his odd doom

  Crying: I rejoice because by the mercy of the Saviour I continue to live in the tomb.

  What’s that, darling? You can’t hear me?

  That’s odd. I can hear you quite distinctly.

  The Wanderer

  Twas the voice of the Wanderer, I heard her exclaim,

  You have weaned me too soon, you must nurse me again,

  She taps as she passes at each window pane,

  Pray does she not know that she taps in vain?

  Her voice flies away on the midnight wind,

  But would she be happier if she were within?

  She is happier far where the night-winds fall

  And there are no doors and no windows at all.

  No man has seen her, this pitiful ghost,

  And no woman either, but heard her at most,

  Sighing and tapping and sighing again,

  You have weaned me too soon, you must nurse me again.

  No Categories!

  I cry I cry

  To God who created me

  Not to you Angels who frustrated me

  Let me fly, let me die,

  Let me come to Him.

  Not to you Angels on the wing,

  With your severe faces,

  And your scholarly grimaces,

  And your do this and that,

  And your exasperating pit-pat

  Of appropriate admonishment.

  This is not what the Creator meant,

  In the day of his gusty creation

  He made this and that

  And laughed to see them grow fat.

  Plod on, you Angels say, do better aspire higher

  And one day you may be like us, or those next below us,

  Or nearer the lowest,

  Or lowest,

  Doing their best.

  Oh no no, you Angels, I say,

  No hierarchies I pray.

  Oh God, laugh not too much aside

  Say not, it is a small matter.

  See what your Angels do; scatter

  Their pride; laugh them away.

  Oh no categories I pray.

  The Deserter

  The world is come upon me, I used to keep it a long way off,

  But now I have been run over and I am in the hands of the hospital staff.

  They say I have not been run over as a matter of fact it’s imagination,

  But they all agree I should be kept in bed under observation.

  I must say it’s very comfortable here, nursie has such nice hands,

  And every morning the doctor comes and lances my tuberculous glands.

  He says he does nothing of the sort, but I have my own feelings about that,

  And what they are if you don’t mind I shall continue to keep under my hat.

  My friend, if you call it a friend, has left me; he says I am a deserter to ill health,

  And that the things I should think about have made off for ever, and so has my wealth.

  Portentous ass, what to do about him’s no strain

  I shall quite simply never speak to the fellow again.

  I rode with my darling…

  I rode with my darling in the dark wood at night

  And suddenly there was an angel burning bright

  Come with me or go far away he said

  But do not stay alone in the dark wood at night.

  My darling grew pale he was responsible

  He said we should go back it was reasonable

  But I wished to stay with the angel in the dark wood at night.

  My darling said goodbye and rode off thoughtfully

  And suddenly I rode after him and came to a cornfield

  Where had my darling gone and where was the angel now?

  The wind bent the corn and drew it along the ground

  And the corn said, Do not go alone in the dark wood.

  Then the wind drew more strongly and the black clouds covered the moon

  And I rode into the dark wood at night.

  There was a light burning in the trees but it was not the angel

  And in the pale light stood a tall tower without windows

 
And a mean rain fell and the voice of the tower spoke,

  Do not stay alone in the dark wood at night.

  The walls of the pale tower were heavy, in a heavy mood

  The great stones stood as if resisting without belief.

  Oh how sad sighed the wind, how disconsolately,

  Do not ride alone in the dark wood at night.

  Loved I once my darling? I love him not now.

  Had I a mother beloved? She lies far away.

  A sister, a loving heart? My aunt a noble lady?

  All all is silent in the dark wood at night.

  God and Man

  Man is my darling, my love and my pain,

  My pleasure, my excitement, and my love again,

  My wisdom, my courage, my power, my all,

  Oh Man, do not come to me until I call.

  In man is my life, and in man is my death,

  He is my hazard, my pride and my breath,

  I sought him, I wrought him, I pant on his worth,

  In him I experience indeterminate growth.

  Oh Man, Man, of all my animals dearest,

  Do not come till I call, though thou weariest first.

  Mr Over

  Mr Over is dead

  He died fighting and true

  And on his tombstone they wrote

  Over to You.

  And who pray is this You

  To whom Mr Over is gone?

  Oh if we only knew that

  We should not do wrong.

  But who is this beautiful You

  We all of us long for so much

  Is he not our friend and our brother

  Our father and such?

  Yes he is this and much more

  This is but a portion

  A sea-drop in a bucket

  Taken from the ocean

  So the voices spake

  Softly above my head

  And a voice in my heart cried: Follow

  Where he has led

  And a devil’s voice cried: Happy

  Happy the dead.

  My Cats

  a Witch speaks

  I like to toss him up and down

  A heavy cat weighs half a Crown

  With a hey do diddle my cat Brown.

  I like to pinch him on the sly

  When nobody is passing by

  With a hey do diddle my cat Fry.

  I like to ruffle up his pride

  And watch him skip and turn aside

  With a hey do diddle my cat Hyde.

  Hey Brown and Fry and Hyde my cats

  That sit on tombstone for your mats.

  Drugs Made Pauline Vague

  Drugs made Pauline vague,

  She sat one day at the breakfast table

  Fingering in a baffled way

  The fronds of the maidenhair plant.

  Was it the salt you were looking for dear?

  Said Dulcie, exchanging a glance with the Brigadier.

  Chuff chuff Pauline what’s the matter?

  Said the Brigadier to his wife

  Who did not even notice

  What a handsome couple they made.

 

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