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Collected Poems 1945-1990

Page 19

by R. S. Thomas


  end, yet the rules are built

  on the impossibility of

  its existence. It is

  how you play, we cry, scanning

  the future for an account

  of our performance. But the rewards

  are there even so, and history

  festers with the numbers of the recipients

  of them, the handsome, the fortunate,

  the well-fed; those who cheated this

  being when he was not looking.

  Waiting

  Face to face? Ah, no

  God; such language falsifies

  the relation. Nor side by side,

  nor near you, nor anywhere

  in time and space.

  Say you were,

  when I came, your name

  vouching for you, ubiquitous

  in its explanations. The

  earth bore and they reaped:

  God, they said, looking

  in your direction. The wind

  changed; over the drowned

  body it was you

  they spat at.

  Young

  I pronounced you. Older

  I still do, but seldomer

  now, leaning far out

  over an immense depth, letting

  your name go and waiting,

  somewhere between faith and doubt,

  for the echoes of its arrival.

  Gone?

  Will they say on some future

  occasion, looking over the flogged acres

  of ploughland: This was Prytherch country?

  Nothing to show for it now: hedges

  uprooted, walls gone, a mobile people

  hurrying to and fro on their fast

  tractors; a forest of aerials

  as though an invading fleet invisibly

  had come to anchor among these

  financed hills. They copy the image

  of themselves projected on their smooth

  screens to the accompaniment of inane

  music. They give grins and smiles

  back in return for the money that is

  spent on them. But where is the face

  with the crazed eyes that through the unseen

  drizzle of its tears looked out

  on this land and found no beauty

  in it, but accepted it, as a man

  will who has needs in him that only

  bare ground, black thorns and the sky’s

  emptiness can fulfil?

  The Empty Church

  They laid this stone trap

  for him, enticing him with candles,

  as though he would come like some huge moth

  out of the darkness to beat there.

  Ah, he had burned himself

  before in the human flame

  and escaped, leaving the reason

  torn. He will not come any more

  to our lure. Why, then, do I kneel still

  striking my prayers on a stone

  heart? Is it in hope one

  of them will ignite yet and throw

  on its illumined walls the shadow

  of someone greater than I can understand?

  Album

  My father is dead.

  I who am look at him

  who is not, as once he

  went looking for me

  in the woman who was.

  There are pictures

  of the two of them, no

  need of a third, hand

  in hand, hearts willing

  to be one but not three.

  What does it mean

  life? I am here I am

  there. Look ! Suddenly

  the young tool in their hands

  for hurting one another.

  And the camera says:

  Smile; there is no wound

  time gives that is not bandaged

  by time. And so they do the

  three of them at me who weep.

  In Great Waters

  You are there also

  at the foot of the precipice

  of water that was too steep

  for the drowned: their breath broke

  and they fell. You have made an altar

  out of the deck of the lost

  trawler whose spars

  are your cross. The sand crumbles

  like bread; the wine is

  the light quietly lying

  in its own chalice. There is

  a sacrament there more beauty

  than terror whose ministrant

  you are and the aisles are full

  of the sea shapes coming to its celebration.

  Travels

  I travelled, learned new ways

  to deceive, smiling not

  frowning; kept my lips supple

  with lies; learned to digest

  malice, knowing it tribute

  to my success. Is the world

  large? Are there areas uncharted

  by the imagination? Never betray

  your knowledge of them. Came here,

  followed the river upward

  to its beginning in the Welsh

  moorland, prepared to analyse

  its contents; stared at the smooth pupil

  of water that stared at me

  back as absent-mindedly as a god

  in contemplation of his own

  navel; felt the coldness

  of unplumbed depths I should have

  stayed here to fathom; watched the running

  away of the resources

  of water to form those far

  seas that men must endeavour

  to navigate on their voyage home.

  Perhaps

  His intellect was the clear mirror

  he looked in and saw the machinery of God

  assemble itself? It was one that reflected

  the emptiness that was where God

  should have been. The mind’s tools had

  no power convincingly to put him

  together. Looking in that mirror was a journey

  through hill mist where, the higher

  one ascends, the poorer the visibility

  becomes. It could have led to despair

  but for the consciousness of a presence

  behind him, whose breath clouding

  that looking-glass proved that it was alive.

  To learn to distrust the distrust

  of feeling – this then was the next step

  for the seeker? To suffer himself to be persuaded

  of intentions in being other than the crossing

  of a receding boundary which did not exist?

  To yield to an unfelt pressure that, irresistible

  in itself, had the character of everything

  but coercion? To believe, looking up

  into invisible eyes shielded against love’s

  glare, in the ubiquity of a vast concern?

  Roger Bacon

  He had strange dreams

  that were real

  in which he saw God

  showing him an aperture

  of the horizon wherein

  were flasks and test-tubes.

  And the rainbow

  ended there not in a pot

  of gold, but in colours

  that, dissected, had the ingredients of

  the death ray.

  Faces at the window

  of his mind

  had the false understanding

  of flowers, but their eyes pointed

  like arrows to

  an imprisoning cell.

  Yet

  he dreamed on in curves

  and equations

  with the smell of saltpetre

  in his nostrils, and saw the hole

  in God’s side that is the wound

  of knowledge and

  thrust his hand in it and believed.

  Emerging

  Well, I said, better to wait

  for him on some peninsula

  of
the spirit. Surely for one

  with patience he will happen by

  once in a while. It was the heart

  spoke. The mind, sceptical as always

  of the anthropomorphisms

  of the fancy, knew he must be put together

  like a poem or a composition

  in music, that what he conforms to

  is art. A promontory is a bare

  place; no God leans down

  out of the air to take the hand

  extended to him. The generations have

  watched there

  in vain. We are beginning to see

  now it is matter is the scaffolding

  of spirit; that the poem emerges

  from morphemes and phonemes; that

  as form in sculpture is the prisoner

  of the hard rock, so in everyday life

  it is the plain facts and natural happenings

  that conceal God and reveal him to us

  little by little under the mind’s tooling.

  After Jericho

  There is an aggression of fact

  to be resisted successfully

  only in verse, that fights language

  with its own tools. Smile, poet,

  among the ruins of a vocabulary

  you blew your trumpet against.

  It was a conscript army; your words,

  every one of them, are volunteers.

  Synopsis

  Plato offered us little

  the Aristotelians did not

  take back. Later Spinoza

  rationalised our approach;

  we were taught that love

  is an intellectual mode

  of our being. Yet Hume questioned

  the very existence of lover

  or loved. The self he left us

  with was what Kant

  failed to transcend or Hegel

  to dissolve: that grey subject

  of dread that Søren Kierkegaard

  depicted crossing its thousands

  of fathoms; the beast that rages

  through history; that presides smiling

  at the councils of the positivists.

  The White Tiger

  It was beautiful as God

  must be beautiful; glacial

  eyes that had looked on

  violence and come to terms

  with it; a body too huge

  and majestic for the cage in which

  it had been put; up

  and down in the shadow

  of its own bulk it went,

  lifting, as it turned,

  the crumpled flower of its face

  to look into my own

  face without seeing me. It

  was the colour of the moonlight

  on snow and as quiet

  as moonlight, but breathing

  as you can imagine that

  God breathes within the confines

  of our definition of him, agonising

  over immensities that will not return.

  The Answer

  Not darkness but twilight

  in which even the best

  of minds must make its way

  now. And slowly the questions

  occur, vague but formidable

  for all that. We pass our hands

  over their surface like blind

  men, feeling for the mechanism

  that will swing them aside. They

  yield, but only to re-form

  as new problems; and one

  does not even do that

  but towers immovable

  before us.

  Is there no way

  other than thought of answering

  its challenge? There is an anticipation

  of it to the point of

  dying. There have been times

  when, after long on my knees

  in a cold chancel, a stone has rolled

  from my mind, and I have looked

  in and seen the old questions lie

  folded and in a place

  by themselves, like the piled

  graveclothes of love’s risen body.

  The Film of God

  Sound, too? The recorder

  that picks up everything picked

  up nothing but the natural

  background. What language

  does the god speak? And the camera’s

  lens, as sensitive to

  an absence as to a presence,

  saw what? What is the colour

  of his thought?

  It was blank, then,

  the screen, as far as he

  was concerned? It was a bare

  landscape and harsh, and geological

  its time. But the rock was

  bright, the illuminated manuscript

  of the lichen. And a shadow,

  as we watched, fell, as though

  of an unseen writer bending over

  his work.

  It was not cloud

  because it was not cold,

  and dark only from the candlepower

  behind it. And we waited

  for it to move, silently

  as the spool turned, waited

  for the figure that cast it

  to come into view for us to

  identify it, and it

  didn’t and we are still waiting.

  The Absence

  It is this great absence

  that is like a presence, that compels

  me to address it without hope

  of a reply. It is a room I enter

  from which someone has just

  gone, the vestibule for the arrival

  of one who has not yet come.

  I modernise the anachronism

  of my language, but he is no more here

  than before. Genes and molecules

  have no more power to call

  him up than the incense of the Hebrews

  at their altars. My equations fail

  as my words do. What resource have I

  other than the emptiness without him of my whole

  being, a vacuum he may not abhor?

  Balance

  No piracy, but there is a plank

  to walk over seventy thousand fathoms,

  as Kierkegaard would say, and far out

  from the land. I have abandoned

  my theories, the easier certainties

  of belief. There are no handrails to

  grasp. I stand and on either side

  there is the haggard gallery

  of the dead, those who in their day

  walked here and fell. Above and

  beyond there is the galaxies’

  violence, the meaningless wastage

  of force, the chaos the blond

  hero’s leap over my head

  brings him nearer to.

  Is there a place

  here for the spirit? Is there time

  on this brief platform for anything

  other than mind’s failure to explain itself?

  Epiphany

  Three kings? Not even one

  any more. Royalty

  has gone to ground, its journeyings

  over. Who now will bring

  gifts and to what place? In

  the manger there are only the toys

  and the tinsel. The child

  has become a man. Far

  off from his cross in the wrong

  season he sits at table

  with us with on his head

  the fool’s cap of our paper money.

  Pilgrimages

  There is an island there is no going

  to but in a small boat the way

  the saints went, travelling the gallery

  of the frightened faces of

  the long-drowned, munching the gravel

  of its beaches. So I have gone

  up the salt lane to the building

  with the stone altar and the candles

  gone out, and kneeled and lif
ted

  my eyes to the furious gargoyle

  of the owl that is like a god

  gone small and resentful. There

  is no body in the stained window

  of the sky now. Am I too late?

  Were they too late also, those

  first pilgrims? He is such a fast

  God, always before us and

  leaving as we arrive.

  There are those here

  not given to prayer, whose office

  is the blank sea that they say daily.

  What they listen to is not

  hymns but the slow chemistry of the soil

  that turns saints’ bones to dust,

  dust to an irritant of the nostril.

  There is no time on this island.

  The swinging pendulum of the tide

  has no clock; the events

  are dateless. These people are not

  late or soon; they are just

  here with only the one question

  to ask, which life answers

  by being in them. It is I

  who ask. Was the pilgrimage

  I made to come to my own

  self, to learn that in times

  like these and for one like me

  God will never be plain and

  out there, but dark rather and

  inexplicable, as though he were in here?

  Jongkind

  The Beach at Sainte-Adresse

  An agreement between

  land and sea, with both using

  the same tone? But the boat,

  motionless in the sand, refuses

  to endorse it, remembering

  the fury of the clawing

  of white hands. However skilfully

  the blue surface mirrors

  the sky, to the boat it is

  the glass lid of a coffin

  within which by cold lips

  the wooden carcases are mumbled.

  Monet

  Portrait of Madame Gaudibert

  Waiting for the curtain

  to rise on an audience

  of one – her husband

  who, knowledgeable about ships,

  knew how to salvage

  the ship-wrecked painter.

  Comforting

  to think how, for a moment

  at least, Monet on even

  keel paddled himself

  on with strokes not

  of an oar but

  of a fast-dipping brush.

  Manet

  The Balcony

  We watch them. They watch

 

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