All the Poems

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All the Poems Page 27

by Stevie Smith

Called Hippy-Mo

  But he did not wish to stay

  With me, he wished to go.

  Hippy-Mo,

  Hippy-Mo.

  I hugged him tight, I said:

  You shall not go,

  You shall stay here with me

  Hippy-Mo.

  Then he grew tall as a house,

  Hippy-Mo,

  Took me in his claws and would

  Not let me go,

  Hippy-Mo.

  His eyes were black as the night

  Through which we flew,

  And the lightnings flashed from his eyes

  As we flew through,

  Hippy-Mo what are

  You going to do

  With me?

  Hippy-Mo, Hippy-Mo,

  Brought me to a sunny land.

  Put me in a cage

  Wherein I rage

  And when I rage he holds

  My hand

  So tight I cannot move

  From him.

  Hippy-Mo

  Let me go,

  Do you wish me

  To die?

  He was so mean he did not condescend

  To reply. Even

  Yes or no.

  Hendecasyllables

  It is the very bewitching hour of eight

  Which is the moment when my new day begins,

  I love to hear the pretty clock striking eight

  I love to get up out of my bed quickly.

  Why is this? Because morning air is so cold?

  Or because of new strength that seems to come then?

  Both. And also because waking up ends dreams.

  Black March

  I have a friend

  At the end

  Of the world.

  His name is a breath

  Of fresh air.

  He is dressed in

  Grey chiffon. At least

  I think it is chiffon.

  It has a

  Peculiar look, like smoke.

  It wraps him round

  It blows out of place

  It conceals him

  I have not seen his face.

  But I have seen his eyes, they are

  As pretty and bright

  As raindrops on black twigs

  In March, and heard him say:

  I am a breath

  Of fresh air for you, a change

  By and by.

  Black March I call him

  Because of his eyes

  Being like March raindrops

  On black twigs.

  (Such a pretty time when the sky

  Behind black twigs can be seen

  Stretched out in one

  Uninterrupted

  Cambridge blue as cold as snow.)

  But this friend

  Whatever new names I give him

  Is an old friend. He says:

  Whatever names you give me

  I am

  A breath of fresh air,

  A change for you.

  Grave by a Holm-Oak

  You lie there, Anna,

  In your grave now,

  Under a snow-sky,

  You lie there now.

  Where have the dead gone?

  Where do they live now?

  Not in the grave, they say,

  Then where now?

  Tell me, tell me,

  Is it where I may go?

  Ask not, cries the holm-oak,

  Weep, says snow.

  The Sea-widow

  How fares it with you, Mrs Cooper my bride?

  Long are the years since you lay by my side.

  Do you wish I was back? Do you speak of me dearest?

  I wish you were back for me to hold nearest.

  Who then lies nearer, Mrs Cooper my bride?

  A black man comes in with the evening tide.

  What is his name? Tell me! How does he dare?

  He comes uninvited. His name is Despair.

  The Stroke

  for M.

  I was a beautiful plant

  I stood in the garden supreme

  Till there came a blight that fell on each leaf

  How I wish this had not been

  Oh I wish this had not been.

  I can feel the sun, and my blighted leaves

  In an elderly way grow glad

  But oh in my depths I bleed, I bleed,

  From a heart that is youthful and sad

  From a heart that is piercèd and sad.

  Come, Death (2)

  I feel ill. What can the matter be?

  I’d ask God to have pity on me,

  But I turn to the one I know, and say:

  Come, Death, and carry me away.

  Ah me, sweet Death, you are the only god

  Who comes as a servant when he is called, you know,

  Listen then to this sound I make, it is sharp,

  Come Death. Do not be slow.

  APPENDIX I – UNCOLLECTED POEMS

  ‘Casmilus’

  Casmilus, whose great name I steal,

  Whose name a greater doth conceal,

  Indulgence, pray,

  And, if I may,

  The winged tuft from either heel.

  ‘As falls the gravelled grouse’

  As falls the gravelled grouse

  From clear sky,

  Or as the clear eyed hawk,

  Sighting through skyey spaces,

  Some lesser creature, formed and nurtured

  By the dear gods for his peculiar pleasure,

  Down plunges through the empyrean blue

  And takes what is his own,

  What rightly,

  Time, place, circumstance harmonious,

  Does, with the ageing of a weary world,

  Escheat to him.

  Henry Wilberforce

  Henry Wilberforce as a child

  Was much addicted to the pleasures of the wild;

  He observed Nature, saw, remembered,

  And was by a natural lion dismembered.

  From the Latin

  Be mine, sweet child, let not the blush departing

  From thy soft cheek declare it was in vain

  The signal flashed, the message to engage departing

  Ah, not in vain, dear girl; ah, not in vain.

  Portrait of a Fool

  Is she not a stupid girl? Just see,

  With heaving beating heart she stands

  And likes to be in bed at love and twists her hands,

  And never laughs at all but only censures or approves

  In pompous hesitating sixth form syllables.

  Yes, she’s rather like a prefect,

  In an adult I always think a de-fect:

  She has a pompous hesitating soul,

  Well, there’s the portrait of a fool.

  Souvenir de Jacky Vandenbroeck

  Very louche is this dog, very louche

  And that is why he is looking this way;

  For the dog that is louche by the night-time

  Can never be smiling by day

  Oh, he prefers to be louche by the night-time

  To smiling and nodding by day.

  ‘The grief of an unquiet mind is a thing accursed’

  The grief of an unquiet mind is a thing accursed,

  It layeth a violent hand upon the flesh;

  But the soul is its enemy and the flesh is torn

  That the soul may be taken and driven untimely forth.

  Unhappy the soul that is linked with an unquiet mind,

  The fight may be long or short but the end is one,

  And the mark of the fight is set on the brow of the flesh

  That men may see and be warned and hurry away.

  Marriage I Think

  Marriage I Think

  For women

  Is the best of opiates.

  It kills the thoughts

  That think about the thoughts,

  It is the best of opiates.

  So said Maria.

  But too long in soli
tude she’d dwelt,

  And too long her thoughts had felt

  Their strength. So when the man drew near,

  Out popped her thoughts and covered him with fear.

  Poor Maria!

  Better that she had kept her thoughts on a chain,

  For now she’s alone again and all in pain;

  She sighs for the man that went and the thoughts that stay

  To trouble her dreams by night and her dreams by day.

  Lulu

  I do not care for Nature,

  She does not care for me;

  You can be alone with a person,

  You can’t be alone with a tree.

  Death of Cold

  Often in her bath, ah cold,

  A thought would come to give her pause;

  And she would stand and only stare

  Upon a sudden cause.

  And this matured her mind so that the gravestone bold

  Declared she died too young to be so old.

  Via Media Via Dolorosa

  There’s so much to be said on either side,

  I’ll be dumb.

  There’s so much to be said on either side,

  I’ll hold my tongue.

  For years and years I never said a word,

  Now I have lost the art: my voice is never heard,

  For my apprehension

  Snaps beneath the tension

  Of what is to be said on either side.

  Sigh No More

  Sigh no more ladies nor gentleman at all,

  Whatever fate attend or woe befall;

  Sigh no more, shed no bitter tear,

  Another hundred years you won’t be here.

  Salon d’Automne

  One thousand and one naked ladies

  With a naïveté

  At once pedantic and sympathetic

  Deck the walls

  Of the Salon d’Automne.

  This is the Slap school of art,

  It would be nice

  To smack them

  Slap, slap, slap,

  That would be nice.

  It is possible

  One might tire of smacking them

  In time

  But not so soon

  As once tires of seeing them.

  We too

  Have our pedantic and unsympathetic

  School,

  It used to show

  A feeling for animals.

  The English are splendid with animals,

  There was The Stag at Bay

  And Faithful unto Death,

  And Man’s Best Friend the horse this time

  Usually under gunfire,

  The English are splendid with animals.

  That older school

  Was perhaps

  Of an intellectual level

  With the Salon d’Automne.

  Nowadays, of course,

  We are more advanced:

  The bad modern painter

  Has lost the naïveté

  Of that earlier school

  And in its place

  Has developed a talent

  For making the work of his betters

  Seem stale

  By unspirited

  Imitation.

  Really

  This is more tiring

  Than the thousand and one

  Naked ladies.

  Sterilization

  Carve delinquency away,

  Said the great Professor Clay.

  A surgical operation is just the thing

  To make everybody as happy as a king.

  But the great Dostoievsky the Epileptic

  Turned on his side and looked rather sceptic.

  And the homosexual Mr Wilde

  Sat in the sunshine and smiled and smiled.

  And a similarly inclined older ghost in a ruff

  Stopped reading his sonnets aloud and said ‘Stuff!’

  And the certainly eccentric Swift, Crashawe and Donne,

  Silently shook hands and thanked God they had gone.

  But the egregious Professor Clay

  Called on Theopompous and won the day.

  And soon all our minds will be flat as a pancake,

  With no room for genius, exaltation or heartache.

  And our children and theirs will preen, smirk and chatter,

  With not even the sense to ask what is the matter.

  The Word

  Oh where is the word

  Said sweet Sally Soo

  Oh! where is the word I seek

  It cannot be true

  There is no word from you

  To put in my velvet cheek

  But the echoes ran

  And the silence came

  And alone in the cold

  She is much the same

  Oh! where is the word oh! where is it pray

  Don’t keep me waiting all night and day.

  Landrecie

  What shall I say to the gentlemen, mother,

  They stand in the doorway to hear what is said,

  Waiting and watching and listening and laughing,

  Is there no word that will send them away?

  What shall I say to the gentlemen, mother,

  What shall I say to them, must I say nothing?

  If I say nothing, then will they not harm us,

  Will they not harm us and shall we not suffer?

  What shall I say to the gentlemen, mother?

  See, they are waiting, and will not depart.

  Closed are your eyelids, your lips closed in silence

  Cannot instruct me, oh what shall I answer?

  This Baronet

  This Baronet is very funny

  And I do so hope he makes some money

  He deserves to for not being a pompous ass

  Like the Bishop of Bye and Mrs Grampus.

  Swift to Depart

  Swift

  to depart

  As falling leaves in autumn

  is your

  Love.

  The Horror of the Midnight

  Little children in the sunlight

  Please be happy while you may

  For the horror of the midnight

  It shall never pass away

  Not though darkness yield to daylight

  Shall it wholly pass away

  Then be happy and let laughter

  Bearing gifts to fortune’s feet

  Cry aloud above the echoes

  We are sure that life is sweet

  Swear again as swore the Danaans

  Oh, life could not be more sweet.

  The Angel

  Underneath the speckled leaves

  Of the speckled laurel-tree

  Sits an angel fawningly

  Looking on the greenery.

  But his eye is very cold

  Bright as night and starry old

  Though he sits so fawningly

  Looking on the greenery.

  O forbear enquiry.

  Revenge

  Revenge, Timotheus cries, and in that shout

  There’s all there is about it and about

  Between this man and men, whate’er befall

  There is no word more to be said at all.

  Lift Thy Sad Heart

  Lift thy sad heart

  Oh lift thy eyes

  Lift thy sad heart.

  Never more lifted

  My heart shall be

  Dead is my heart

  Of misery.

  Never more lifted

  My eyes at all

  From a low place

  Of funeral.

  Flounder

  (Part of an Acrostic)

  Rather a fishy thing to do –

  And yet this is not wholly true.

  The Pupil

  Je ne peux le verstehen

  Je ne peux pas le verstehen

  Je ne peux pas le comprendre

  Ich kann es nicht verstehen.

  Portrait

  Stupid and self-satisfied

  S
tupid is the word

  He sits and claps his own applause

  Isn’t he absurd?

  Isn’t he a darling baby

  Crowing in the sun

  Cockadoodle on the dunghill

  Lots of happy fun?

  Isn’t he a little monster –

  Thirty-two?

  My God

  I should have said that he was two

  Without the thirty. Odd.

  Left, Right

  Left, right;

  Be bright.

  Ichabod

  Oh Ichabod, the glory is departed,

  Those antique deserts and those happy palms

  Bloom not for me, alone and broken hearted,

  Stir but the sails of thought that grief becalms.

  On Coming Late to Parnassus

  Upon his loneliness and pain

  Fame broke

  Too strong a wave for him

  And slew.

  A Portrait

  I never know what to say

  When I’m in company

  I feel quite tonguetied and shy,

  I’m a perfect misery.

  It really is tantalising,

  And after the Education I’ve had

  Surprising.

  There’s nothing I’d rather say

  Than something Edifying and Unusual.

  The Horrible Man

  He is a most horrible man,

  Why look?

  He is a horrible man

  He has done something at which the crocodile

  Grew wan

  He has never done anything at all – no, not by chance,

  At which the crocodile kept

  Countenance

  He is a most horrible man

  The Octopus

  Darling little Tom and Harry,

  When time comes for you to marry,

  Lullaby,

  Mother will be close at hand,

  Close at hand

  Little girlies, you who marry

  Darling Tom and darling Harry

  By and by,

  Understand

  Mother will be close at hand,

  Close at hand

  As Sways

  As sways the gentle sycamore

  Beneath the winds of heaven,

  So sways my inconsistent heart, dear love,

  When you are far away;

  So sways my inconstant heart, dear love,

  And shall for ever sway.

  No use for you to say:

  ‘Better the oak by tempest riven

  Than nodding sycamore beneath the winds of heaven’

  Portrait

  Mr Petty-Pie

  Keeps his masterpieces in his head,

  He is a better tactician than I.

  Silent, silent thought.

  Never to be brought

  To the printed page,

  Weave a subtle shade.

  O’er the facey-fie

  Of little Petty-Pie;

  And may its lineaments continue to suggest

  A wisdom too profound to be expressed.

  Two Friends

  I only asked my friends to be friendly and polite,

  I found them indifferent and censorious;

  The one I left to silence, the other to reproach:

  God send me over all such friends victorious

  ‘When I Awake’

  When I awake

  The whole returning flood of consciousness

 

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