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All the Poems

Page 16

by Stevie Smith


  By man’s called God,

  Away, melancholy, let it go.

  Man aspires

  To good,

  To love

  Sighs;

  Beaten, corrupted, dying

  In his own blood lying

  Yet heaves up an eye above

  Cries, Love, love.

  It is his virtue needs explaining,

  Not his failing.

  Away, melancholy,

  Away with it, let it go.

  Dido’s Farewell to Aeneas

  from Virgil

  I have lived and followed my fate without flinching, followed it gladly

  And now, not wholly unknown, I come to the end.

  I built this famous city, I saw the walls rise,

  As for my abominable brother, I don’t think I’ve been too lenient.

  Was I happy? Yes, at a price, I might have been happier

  If our Dardanian Sailor had condescended to put in elsewhere.

  Now she fell silent, turning her face to the pillow,

  Then getting up quickly, the dagger in her hand,

  I die unavenged, she cried, but I die as I choose,

  Come Death, you know you must come when you’re called

  Although you’re a god. And this way, and this way, I call you.

  Childe Rolandine

  Dark was the day for Childe Rolandine the artist

  When she went to work as a secretary-typist

  And as she worked she sang this song

  Against oppression and the rule of wrong:

  It is the privilege of the rich

  To waste the time of the poor

  To water with tears in secret

  A tree that grows in secret

  That bears fruit in secret

  That ripened falls to the ground in secret

  And manures the parent tree

  Oh the wicked tree of hatred and the secret

  The sap rising and the tears falling.

  Likely also, sang the Childe, my soul will fry in hell

  Because of this hatred, while in heaven my employer does well

  And why should he not, exacerbating though he be but generous

  Is it his fault I must work at a work that is tedious?

  Oh heaven sweet heaven keep my thoughts in their night den

  Do not let them by day be spoken.

  But then she sang, Ah why not? tell all, speak, speak,

  Silence is vanity, speak for the whole truth’s sake.

  And rising she took the bugle and put it to her lips, crying:

  There is a Spirit feeds on our tears, I give him mine.

  Mighty human feelings are his food

  Passion and grief and joy his flesh and blood

  That he may live and grow fat we daily die

  This cropping One is our immortality.

  Childe Rolandine bowed her head and in the evening

  Drew the picture of this spirit from heaven.

  The Jungle Husband

  Dearest Evelyn, I often think of you

  Out with the guns in the jungle stew

  Yesterday I hittapotamus

  I put the measurements down for you but they got lost in the fuss.

  It’s not a good thing to drink out here

  You know, I’ve practically given it up, dear.

  Tomorrow I am going alone a long way

  Into the jungle. It is all grey

  But green on top,

  Only sometimes when a tree has fallen

  The sun comes down plop, it is quite appalling.

  You never want to go in a jungle pool

  In the hot sun, it would be the act of a fool.

  Because it’s always full of anacondas, Evelyn, not looking ill-fed

  I’ll say. So no more now, from your loving husband, Wilfred.

  ‘Come on, Come back’

  incident in a future war

  Left by the ebbing tide of battle

  On the field of Austerlitz

  The girl soldier Vaudevue sits

  Her fingers tap the ground, she is alone

  At midnight in the moonlight she is sitting alone on a round flat stone.

  Graded by the Memel Conference first

  Of all humane exterminators

  M.L.5.

  Has left her just alive

  Only her memory is dead for evermore.

  She fears and cries, Ah me why am I here?

  Sitting alone on a round flat stone on a hummock there.

  Rising, staggering, over the ground she goes

  Over the seeming miles of rutted meadow

  To the margin of a lake

  The sand beneath her feet

  Is cold and damp and firm to the waves’ beat.

  Quickly – as a child, an idiot, as one without memory –

  She strips her uniform off, strips, stands and plunges

  Into the icy waters of the adorable lake.

  On the surface of the water lies

  A ribbon of white moonlight

  The waters on either side of the moony track

  Are black as her mind.

  Her mind is as secret from her

  As the water on which she swims,

  As secret as profound as ominous.

  Weeping bitterly for her ominous mind, her plight

  Up the river of white moonlight she swims

  Until a treacherous undercurrent

  Seizing her in an icy amorous embrace

  Dives with her, swiftly severing

  The waters which close above her head.

  An enemy sentinel

  Finding the abandoned clothes

  Waits for the swimmer’s return

  (‘Come on, come back’)

  Waiting, whiling away the hour

  Whittling a shepherd’s pipe from the hollow reeds.

  In the chill light of dawn

  Ring out the pipe’s wild notes

  ‘Come on, come back.’

  Vaudevue

  In the swift and subtle current’s close embrace

  Sleeps on, stirs not, hears not the familiar tune

  Favourite of all the troops of all the armies

  Favourite of Vaudevue

  For she had sung it too

  Marching to Austerlitz

  ‘Come on, come back.’

  Why are the Clergy …?

  Why are the clergy of the Church of England

  Always altering the words of the prayers in the Prayer Book?

  Cranmer’s touch was surer than theirs, do they not respect him?

  For instance last night in church I heard

  (I italicize the interpolation)

  ‘The Lord bless you and keep you and all who are dear unto you’

  As the blessing is a congregational blessing and meant to be

  This is questionable on theological grounds

  But is it not offensive to the ear and also ludicrous?

  The ‘unto’ is a particularly ripe piece of idiocy

  Oh how offensive it is. I suppose we shall have next

  ‘Lighten our darkness we beseech thee oh Lord and the darkness of all who are dear unto us.’

  It seems a pity. Does Charity object to the objection?

  Then I cry, and not for the first time to that smooth face

  Charity, have pity.

  I Remember

  It was my bridal night I remember,

  An old man of seventy-three

  I lay with my young bride in my arms,

  A girl with t.b.

  It was wartime, and overhead

  The Germans were making a particularly heavy raid on Hampstead.

  What rendered the confusion worse, perversely

  Our bombers had chosen that moment to set out for Germany.

  Harry, do they ever collide?

  I do not think it has ever happened,

  Oh my bride, my bride.

  But Murderous

  A mother slew her unborn babe

  In a day
of recent date

  Because she did not wish him to be born in a world

  Of murder and war and hate

  ‘Oh why should I bear a babe from my womb

  To be broke in pieces by the hydrogen bomb?’

  I say this woman deserves little pity

  That she was a fool and a murderess

  Is a child’s destiny to be contained by a mind

  That signals only a lady in distress?

  And why should human infancy be so superior

  As to be too good to be born in this world?

  Did she think it was an angel or a baa-lamb

  That lay in her belly furled?

  Oh the child is the young of its species

  Alike with that noble, vile, curious and fierce

  How foolish this poor mother to suppose

  Her act told us aught that was not murderous

  (As, item, That the arrogance of a half-baked mind

  Breed murder; makes us all unkind.)

  This is Disgraceful and Abominable

  Of all the disgraceful and abominable things

  Making animals perform for the amusement of human beings is

  Utterly disgraceful and abominable.

  Animals are animals and have their nature

  And that’s enough, it is enough, leave it alone.

  A disgraceful and abominable thing I saw in a French circus

  A performing dog

  Raised his back leg when he did not need to

  He did not wish to relieve himself, he was made to raise his leg.

  The people sniggered. Oh how disgraceful and abominable.

  Weep for the disgrace, forbid the abomination.

  The animals are cruelly trained,

  How could patience do it, it would take too long, they are cruelly trained.

  Lions leap through fire, it is offensive,

  Elephants dance, it is offensive

  That the dignified elephant should dance for fear of hot plates,

  The lion leap or be punished.

  And how can the animals be quartered or carted except cheaply?

  Profit lays on the whip of punishment, money heats the prodding iron,

  Cramps cages. Oh away with it, away with it, it is so disgraceful and abominable.

  Weep the disgraces. Forbid the abominations.

  God the Eater

  There is a god in whom I do not believe

  Yet to this god my love stretches,

  This god whom I do not believe in is

  My whole life. My life and I am his.

  Everything that I have of pleasure and pain

  (Of pain, of bitter pain and men’s contempt)

  I give this god for him to feed upon

  And he is my whole life and I am his.

  When I am dead I hope that he will eat

  Everything I have been and have not been

  And crunch and feed upon it and grow fat

  Eating my life all up as it is his.

  God the Drinker

  porque fue sensible

  I like to see him drink the gash

  I made with my own knife

  And draw the blood out of my wrist

  And drink my life.

  Who is this One who drinks so deep?

  His name is Death, He drinks asleep.

  (She has taken the sweet knife far away,

  The knife bleeds by night and day,

  Night and day the blade drips,

  I put the sweet knife to my lips.)

  It was a god, he drank my health,

  He came in shadows and by stealth.

  Will Man Ever Face Fact and not Feel Flat?

  The rocks and trees in silence stood

  To see where Man ran by,

  A creature weak as this one is

  What can he do but die?

  But as they stood and scornful smiled

  They heard an angel call:

  ‘The tender creature needeth love,

  He needeth love above all.’

  This made the rocks and trees laugh more

  Until they saw the force of it,

  Saw Man disembowelling the earth

  And killing because of it.

  Ah then they found Man admirable,

  ‘But,’ said the angel ‘is he?’

  And weeping cried, ‘The need of love

  Makes Man too busy.’

  Then God said, ‘You are wrong all,

  The need of love is meant to call

  Man to me, I am love, I,

  If it does not, for lack of love he’ll die.’

  But then came a little wind sneaking along

  That was older than all and infamously strong,

  ‘Oh what an artistic animal is our little Man,’

  Sneered the wind, ‘It is wonderful how he can

  Invent fairy stories about everything, pit pat,

  Will he ever face fact and not feel flat?’

  Every Lovely Limb’s a Desolation

  I feel a mortal isolation

  Wrap each lovely limb in desolation,

  Sight, hearing, all

  Suffer a fall.

  I see the pretty fields and streams, I hear

  Beasts calling and birds singing, oh not clear

  But as a prisoner

  Who in a train doth pass

  And through the glass

  Peer;

  Ah me, so far away is joy, so near.

  Break, break the glass, you say?

  These thoughts are but a mood

  Blow them away, go free?

  They are my whole soul’s food.

  Ghost’s food! Sepulchral ailment!

  Thou sleekst in me Death’s tegument

  And so art bent

  To do, and this I know.

  Yet there are days, oh brief,

  When thought’s caught half-asleep

  (Most merrily) and drowsing

  Set in a meadow browsing.

  Ah then, like summer breeze in lovely trees

  That comes in little pants unequally,

  Or like the little waves of summer seas

  That push and fuss

  In heaven knows what sort of busyness,

  Idly, idly, my thoughts bring me to sleep,

  On sunny summer day, to sleep. In sun

  I fall asleep.

  But I must wake and wake again in pain

  Crying – to see where sun was once all dust and stain

  As on a window pane –

  All, all is isolation

  And every lovely limb’s a desolation.

  A Dream of Nourishment

  I had a dream of nourishment

  Against a breast

  My infant face was presst

  Ah me the suffisance I drew therefrom

  What strength, what glory from that fattening fluid,

  The fattening most

  Was to my infant taste

  For oh the sun of strength beat in my veins

  And swelled me full, I lay in brightest sun

  All ready to put forth, all bursting, all delight.

  But in my dream the breast withdrew

  In darkness I lay then

  And thin,

  Thin as a sheeted ghost

  And I was famished,

  Hankered for a dish

  I thought, of blood, as in some classicist’s

  Old tale

  To give me hue and substance, make me hale.

  Oh breast, oh Best

  That I held fast

  Oh fattening draught

  Timely repast

  Quaffed, presst

  And lost.

  The breast was withdrawn violently

  And oh the famishment for me.

  The Airy Christ

  Who is this that comes in grandeur, coming from the burning East?

  This is he we had not thought of, this is he the airy Christ.

  Airy in an airy manner, in an airy parkland walking,

  Others ta
ke him by the hand, lead him, do the talking.

  But the Form, the airy One, frowns an airy frown

  What they say he knows must be, but he looks aloofly down,

  Looks aloofly at his feet, looks aloofly at his hands,

  Knows they must, as prophets say, nailèd be to wooden bands,

  As he knows the words he sings, that he sings so happily,

  Must be changed to working laws, yet sings he ceaselessly.

  Those who truly hear his voice, the words, the happy song,

  Never shall need working laws to keep from doing wrong.

  Deaf men will pretend sometimes they hear the song, the words,

  And make excuse to sin extremely; this will be absurd.

  Heed it not. Whatever foolish men may do the song is cried

  For those who hear, and the sweet singer does not care that he was crucified.

  For he does not wish that men should love him more than anything

  Because he died; he only wishes they would hear him sing.

  It Filled my Heart with Love

  When I hold in my hand a soft and crushable animal, and feel

  the fur beat for fear and the soft feather, I cannot feel unhappy.

  In his fur the animal rode, and in his fur he strove,

  And oh it filled my heart my heart, it filled my heart with love.

  I. An Agnostic

  (of his religious friend)

  He often gazes on the air

  And sees quite plain what is not there

  Peopling the wholesome void with horrid shapes

  Which he manoeuvres in religious japes.

  And yet he is more gracious than I,

  He has such a gracious personality.

  II. A Religious Man

  (of his agnostic friend)

  He says that religious thought and all our nerviness

  Is because of the great shock it was for all of us

  Long, long ago when animal turned human being

  Which is more than enough to account for everything …

  And yet he is more gracious than I,

  He has such a gracious personality.

  Dear Little Sirmio

  Catullus recollected

  Dear little Sirmio

  Of all capes and islands

  Wherever Neptune rides the coastal waters and the open sea

  You really are the nicest.

  How glad I am to see you again, how fondly I look at you.

  No sooner had I left Bithynia – and what was the name of the other place?

  And was safely at sea

  I thought only of seeing you.

  Really is anything nicer

  After working hard and being thoroughly worried

  Than to leave it all behind and set out for home

  Dear old home and one’s comfortable bed?

  Even if one wears oneself out paying for them.

  ‘Great Unaffected Vampires and the Moon’

  It was a graveyard scene. The crescent moon

  Performed a devil’s purpose for she shewed

 

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