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Complete Poems

Page 20

by Cecil Day-Lewis


  Or looked therein to be magnified; whose will was ever more

  Love’s rentiers to live, in make-up still admired.

  Earth shall disown them. Noah shall see drowning of many,

  Compounded greed with charity, let wisdom out on hire,

  Made freedom a trickster and passion a sick mechanical whore.

  Their pride shall corrode, their shining look in the flood be tarnished.

  What is in store

  For Noah and the flood we foresee: unremitting war

  And undisguised on all who are mad for the personal glory.

  Call not the issue certain. But let the waters beware

  Of deviation, the line of least resistance; ignore

  The traitor’s sop; unclench those hands whose hold on the living

  Has been an ice-age. Stone are those hearts, and only before

  The stern and rhythmic assault of continual waves will they yield.

  But when the floods shall cease,

  When the earth knows she is clean and sends her love to Noah

  By the raven of tenderness, when abides the dove of peace,

  Down the hillsides then shall the waters tumble apace,

  Finding their level, wearing the sun on their wide shoulders,

  To wed the radiant valleys: that reconciled embrace

  Shall raise – taller than sunflowers and record crops – the race

  That Noah foresaw in the veiled face of the avenging waters.

  The floods shall cease,

  Though forgotten never the height of their triumphs, the truth of their source.

  Delight shall Noah have, as a man returning from exile

  Beholds a land greener, more great with growth and ease

  Than dreams dared imagine; but most, to live among these

  Who shared his exile, to work with, to have for enduring fellows

  All rivers, rains and seas.

  1936

  OVERTURES TO DEATH

  TO E. M. FORSTER

  Maple and Sumach

  Maple and sumach down this autumn ride –

  Look, in what scarlet character they speak!

  For this their russet and rejoicing week

  Trees spend a year of sunsets on their pride.

  You leaves drenched with the lifeblood of the year –

  What flamingo dawns have wavered from the east,

  What eves have crimsoned to their toppling crest

  To give the fame and transience that you wear!

  Leaf-low he shall lie soon: but no such blaze

  Briefly can cheer man’s ashen, harsh decline;

  His fall is short of pride, he bleeds within

  And paler creeps to the dead end of his days.

  O light’s abandon and the fire-crest sky

  Speak in me now for all who are to die!

  February 1936

  Infirm and grey

  This leaden-hearted day

  Drags its lank hours, wishing itself away.

  Grey as the skin

  Of long-imprisoned men

  The sky, and holds a poisoned thought within.

  Whether to die,

  Or live beneath fear’s eye –

  Heavily hangs the sentence of this sky.

  The unshed tears

  Of frost on boughs and briers

  Gathering wait discharge like our swoln fears.

  Servant and host

  Of this fog-bitter frost,

  A carrion-crow flaps, shadowing the lost.

  Now to the fire

  From killing fells we bear

  This new-born lamb, our premature desire.

  We cannot meet

  Our children’s mirth, at night

  Who dream their blood upon a darkening street.

  Stay away, Spring!

  Since death is on the wing

  To blast our seed and poison every thing.

  Bombers

  Through the vague morning, the heart preoccupied,

  A deep in air buried grain of sound

  Starts and grows, as yet unwarning –

  The tremor of baited deepsea line.

  Swells the seed, and now tight sound-buds

  Vibrate, upholding their paean flowers

  To the sun. There are bees in sky-bells droning,

  Flares of crimson at the heart unfold.

  Children look up, and the elms spring-garlanded

  Tossing their heads and marked for the axe.

  Gallant or woebegone, alike unlucky –

  Earth shakes beneath us: we imagine loss.

  Black as vermin, crawling in echelon

  Beneath the cloud-floor, the bombers come:

  The heavy angels, carrying harm in

  Their wombs that ache to be rid of death.

  This is the seed that grows for ruin,

  The iron embryo conceived in fear.

  Soon or late its need must be answered

  In fear delivered and screeching fire.

  Choose between your child and this fatal embryo.

  Shall your guilt bear arms, and the children you want

  Be condemned to die by the powers you paid for

  And haunt the houses you never built?

  A Parting Shot

  He said, ‘Do not point your gun

  At the dove in the judas tree:

  It might go off, you see.’

  So I fired, and the tree came down –

  Limed leaf, branch and stock,

  And the fantail swerving flew

  Up like a shuttlecock

  Released into the blue.

  And he said, ‘I told you so’.

  Newsreel

  Enter the dream-house, brothers and sisters, leaving

  Your debts asleep, your history at the door:

  This is the home for heroes, and this loving

  Darkness a fur you can afford.

  Fish in their tank electrically heated

  Nose without envy the glass wall: for them

  Clerk, spy, nurse, killer, prince, the great and the defeated,

  Move in a mute day-dream,

  Bathed in this common source, you gape incurious

  At what your active hours have willed –

  Sleep-walking on that silver wall, the furious

  Sick shapes and pregnant fancies of your world.

  There is the mayor opening the oyster season:

  A society wedding: the autumn hats look swell:

  An old crocks’ race, and a politician

  In fishing-waders to prove that all is well.

  Oh, look at the warplanes! Screaming hysteric treble

  In the long power-drive, like gannets they fall steep.

  But what are they to trouble –

  These silver shadows to trouble your watery, womb-deep sleep?

  See the big guns, rising, groping, erected

  To plant death in your world’s soft womb.

  Fire-bud, smoke blossom, iron seed projected –

  Are these exotics? They will grow nearer home.

  Grow nearer home – and out of the dream-house stumbling

  One night into a strangling air and the flung

  Rags of children and thunder of stone niagaras tumbling,

  You’ll know you slept too long.

  Regency Houses

  In the abandoned heaven

  Light shrinks like pools on sand –

  One in a million days

  That dying where they stand

  Image our last and leave an

  Adored light behind.

  Autumn is soon. We gaze

  At a Regency terrace, curved

  Like the ritual smile, resigned

  And formidable, that’s carved

  On the stone face of the dead.

  Shallow a breath divides us

  From the formal-smiling dead.

  Light leaves this shore, these shells,

  The windows glazed in death,

  And soon on us beneath
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  A first leaf falls,

  And then the next night hides us.

  We who in younger days,

  Hoping too much, tried on

  The habit of perfection,

  Have learnt how it betrays

  Our shrinking flesh: we have seen

  The praised transparent will

  Living now by reflection.

  The panes darken: but still

  We have seen peering out

  The mad, too mobile face

  Under the floral hat.

  Are we living – we too,

  Living extravagant farce

  In the finery of spent passions?

  Is all we do and shall do

  But the glib, habitual breathing

  Of clocks where time means nothing,

  In a condemned mansion?

  Landscapes

  1

  This autumn park, the sequin glitter of leaves

  Upon its withering bosom, the lake a moonstone –

  O light mellifluous, glossing the stone-blind mansion,

  October light, a godsend to these groves!

  These unkempt groves, blind vistas, mark the defeat

  Of men who imposed on Nature a private elegance

  And died of dropsy. Let still the gay ghosts dance,

  They are heartless ones we should wish nor fear to meet.

  A ruin now, but here the Folly grinned –

  The mad memento that one joker built:

  Mocking their reasoned crops, a fabulous guilt

  Towered up and cursed them fruitless from the ground.

  Light drops, the hush of fallen ash, submission

  Of a dying face now muted for the grave:

  Through mansion, lake and the lacklustre groves

  We see the landscape of their dissolution.

  2

  A landscape, now, with no remorse

  Or symmetry, hacked out by those

  Whom versatile history later chose –

  Her ugliest, cash Conquistadors.

  An inflamed sky reflects the wrath

  Of babes from whom they hid the sun:

  Disease and slag-tip smoulder on

  With rancour round their narrowing path.

  Towns there are choked with desperate men,

  Scrap-iron gluts the sidings here:

  Iron and men they mould for war,

  But in their death that war will end.

  From the gashed hills of desolation

  Our life-blood springs to liberty,

  And in the callous eyes we see

  The landscape of their dissolution.

  Sex-Crime

  For one, the sudden fantastic grimace

  Above, the red clown’s-grin ripping the chalk sad sky,

  Hailstones hatched out of midsummer, a face

  Blanched with love’s vile reversal.

  The spirit died

  First – such blank amazement took away its breath,

  And let the body cry

  Through the short scuffle and infamy of death.

  For the other, who knows what nice proportion of loathing

  And lust conjured the deep devil, created

  That chance of incandescence? Figures here prove nothing.

  One step took him through the roaring waterfall

  That closed like a bead-curtain, left him alone with the writhing

  Of what he loved or hated.

  His hands leapt out: they took vengeance for all

  Denials and soft answers. There was one who said

  Long since, ‘rough play will end in tears’. There was Cain

  In the picture-book. Forgotten. Here is one dead,

  And one could never be whole again.

  The news

  Broke a Sunday inertia: ring after ring

  Across that smug mirror went echoing

  And fainting out to the dim margins of incredulity.

  A few raw souls accuse

  Themselves of this felony and find not guilty –

  Acquitted on a mere alibi or technical point.

  Most see it as an island eruption, viewed

  From the safe continent; not dreaming the same fire pent

  Within their clay that warps

  The night with fluent alarm, their own wrath spewed

  Through the red craters of that undistinguished corpse.

  All that has reached them is the seismic thrill:

  The ornaments vibrate on the shelf; then they are still.

  Snugly we settle down

  Into our velvet and legitimate bed,

  While news-sheets are yet falling all over the town

  Like a white ash. Falling on one dead

  And one can never be whole again.

  You watch him

  Pulpited in the dock, preaching repentance

  While the two professionals in fancy dress

  Manœuvre formally to score off him or catch him.

  But grief has her conventions –

  The opaque mask of misery will confess

  Nothing, nor plead moving extenuations.

  But you who crowd the court-room, will you never be called

  To witness for the defence?

  Accomplices,

  All of you, now – though now is still too late –

  Bring on the missing evidence! Reveal the coiled

  Venom, the curse that needs

  Only a touch to be articulate.

  You, Judge, strip off! Show us the abscess boiling

  Beneath your scarlet. Oh point, someone, to where it spreads

  On every hand – the red, collusive stain …

  All too well you have done your work: for one is dead,

  And the other will not be whole again.

  The Bells that Signed

  The bells that signed a conqueror in

  Or franked the lovers’ bed, now mean

  Nothing more heavenly than their

  Own impulse and recoil of air.

  But still at eve, when the wind swells

  Out of the west, those rocking bells

  Buoy up the sunken light, or mark

  What rots unfathomed in the dark.

  Broods the stone-lipped conqueror still

  Abject upon his iron hill,

  And lovers in the naked beds

  Cry for more than maidenheads.

  A Happy View

  … So take a happy view –

  This lawn graced with the candle-flames of crocus,

  Frail-handed girls under the flowering chestnut,

  Or anything will do

  That time takes back before it seems untrue:

  And, if the truth were told,

  You’d count it luck, perceiving in what shallow

  Crevices and few crumbling grains of comfort

  Man’s joy will seed, his cold

  And hardy fingers find an eagle’s hold.

  Overtures to Death

  1

  For us, born into a world

  Of fledged, instinctive trees,

  Of lengthening days, snowfall at Christmas

  And sentried palaces,

  You were the one our parents

  Could not forget or forgive –

  A remittance man, a very very

  Distant relative.

  We read your name in the family

  Bible. It was tabu

  At meals and lessons, but in church sometimes

  They seemed to be praying for you.

  You lived overseas, we gathered:

  And often lying safe

  In bed we thought of you, hearing the indrawn

  Breath of the outcast surf.

  Later we heard them saying

  You had done well in the War.

  And, though you never came home to us,

  We saw your name everywhere.

  When home grew unsympathetic,

  You were all the rage for a while –

  The favourite uncle with the blank-cheque-book
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br />   And the understanding smile.

  Some of us went to look for you

  In aeroplanes and fast cars:

  Some tried the hospitals, some took to vice,

  Others consulted the stars.

  But now, sir, that you may be going

  To visit us any night,

  We watch the french windows, picturing you

  In rather a different light.

  The house, we perceive, is shabby,

  There’s dry-rot in the wood:

  It’s a poor welcome and it won’t keep you out

  And we wish we had been good.

  But there’s no time now for spring-cleaning

  Or mending the broken lock.

  We are here in the shrouded drawing-room till

  Your first, your final knock.

  2

  When all the sky is skimming

  And lovers frisk in the hay,

  When it’s easy forgiving the dead or the living,

  He is not so far away.

  When love’s hands are too hot, too cold,

  And justice turns a deaf ear,

  When springs congeal and the skies are sealed,

  We know that he is near.

  Now here was a property, on all sides

  Considered quite imposing:

  Take a good look round at house and grounds –

  The mortgage is foreclosing.

  Now Death he is the bailiff

  And he sits in our best room

  Appraising chintz and ornaments

  And the child in the womb.

  We were not shysters or loonies,

  Our spirit was up to proof:

  Simpler far is the reason for our

  Notice to quit this roof.

  We paid for our lease and rule of life

  In hard cash; and one day

  The news got through to you-know-who

  That we’d ceased to pay our way.

  Oh what will happen to our dear sons,

  Our dreams of pensioned ease?

  They are downed and shredded for the wind we dreaded

  Worries the blossom trees.

  Oh Death he is the bailiff

  And his men wait outside:

  We shall sleep well in our handsome shell

  While he auctions away our pride.

  3

 

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