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Collected Poems 1945-1990

Page 26

by R. S. Thomas

There was an apple tree with a girl

  under it loitering as though

  for you. It was not for you, but

  she accepted you for want of a better.

  Among scanty possessions fear

  was yours. Courage you borrowed

  on short loan; set up house for the virtues

  a wife brings. Venturing abroad

  among the associated meannesses

  you had all things in common.

  Were you mobile? So was the age;

  so were your standards, cheering

  what yesterday was condemned

  and tomorrow would be forgotten;

  turning left, when you should have gone right,

  to prove determinism to be in error.

  And one came to your back door

  all bones and in rags, asking the kiss

  that would have transformed both you

  and him; and you would not,

  slamming it in his face, only

  to find him waiting at your bed’s side.

  Zero

  What time is it?

  Is it the hour when the servant

  of Pharaoh’s daughter went down

  and found the abandoned baby

  in the bulrushes? The hour

  when Dido woke and knew Aeneas

  gone from her? When Caesar

  looked at the entrails and took

  their signal for the crossing

  of the dividing river?

  Is it

  that time when Aneirin

  fetched the poem out of his side

  and laid it upon the year’s altar

  for the appeasement of envious

  gods?

  It is no time

  at all. The shadow falls

  on the bright land and men

  launder their minds in it, as

  they have done century by

  century to prepare themselves for the crass deed.

  The Bank

  Meditating upon gold

  we prick the heart on its thorns.

  Yellow, yellow, yellow hair

  of the spring, the poet cries,

  admiring the gorse bushes

  by the old stone wall. But the maiden’s

  hair overflows the arms

  of the hero. Though you sit down

  a thousand years, the echo

  of the petals is inaudible

  in the sunlight. Explain to me

  why we use the same word

  for the place that we store our money in,

  and that other place where the gorse blows.

  Revision

  So the catechism begins:

  ‘Who are you?’

  ‘I don’t know.’

  ‘Who gave you that ignorance?’

  ‘It is the system that, when two people

  meet, they combine to produce

  the darkness in which the self

  is born, a wick hungering

  for its attendant flame.’

  ‘What will that

  do for you?’

  ‘Do for me? It is the echo

  of a promise I am meant

  to believe in.’

  ‘Repeat that promise.’

  ‘Whoever believes in this fire,

  although he lives, he shall die.’

  ‘You

  blaspheme. The promises were made

  by you, not to you. What do you learn

  from them?’

  ‘I learn there are two beings

  so that, when one is present, the other

  is far off. There is no room

  for them both.’

  ‘Life’s simpleton,

  know this gulf you have created

  can be crossed by prayer. Let me hear

  if you can walk it.’

  ‘I have walked it.

  It is called silence, and is a rope

  over an unfathomable

  abyss, which goes on and on

  never arriving.’

  ‘So that your Amen

  is unsaid. Know, friend, the arrival

  is the grace given to maintain

  your balance, the power which supplies

  not the maggot of flame you desired,

  that consumes the flesh, but the unseen

  current between two points, coming

  to song in the nerves, as in the telegraph

  wires, the tighter that they are drawn.’

  Similarities

  I saw man staggering on his way

  with his un-necessaries. Where

  was he going? He turned on me

  those hurt eyes that are bold

  in their weakness, bruised by a question

  he had not asked. Look,

  he implied, sparing a glance

  for the conjurors, the somersault

  men, the mendicants with their caps brimming

  with dead leaves.

  And

  the mothers were there, nursing

  a dead child, and the rich endowing

  a mortuary. While the youth with hair

  on his chest flaunted a tin

  cross.

  Dance for me,

  called the weak pipe, and the laughter

  ascended to the rattle

  of a cracked drum.

  My masters,

  the machine whined, putting the yawning

  consciences to sleep.

  It is intolerable,

  I cried. But the face

  that is life’s trophy stared at me

  from the gallery, where it had been set

  up, so that I became silent

  before it, corrected by a resemblance.

  AD 2000

  The gyres revolve;

  man comes to the confrontation

  with his terror, with the imperative

  of choice. Other compulsions are shown

  for what they were. Time rinses its eyes

  clean. From tyranny of the hand

  we are delivered to the exigencies

  of freedom, to the acknowledgement

  by the unlimited of its limitations.

  What power shall minister to us

  at the closure of the century,

  of the millennia? The god,

  who was Janus-faced, is eclipsed

  totally by our planet, by the shadow

  cast on him by contemporary

  mind. Shall we continue worshipping

  that mind for its halo,

  its light the mirage of its radiation?

  Ritual

  Not international

  renown, but international

  vocabulary, the macaronics

  of time: μoïρα, desiderium,

  brad, la vida

  breve, despair – I am the bone

  on which all have beaten out

  their message to the mind

  that would soar. Faithful

  in translation, its ploy was to evade

  my resources. It saw

  me dance through the Middle

  Ages, and wrote its poetry

  with quilled pen. What

  so rich as the language

  to which the priests

  buried me? They have exchanged

  their vestments for white coats,

  working away in their bookless

  laboratories, ministrants

  in that ritual beyond words

  which is the Last Sacrament of the species.

  Calling

  The telephone is the fruit

  of the tree of the knowledge

  of good and evil. We may call

  everyone up on it but God.

  To do that is to declare

  that he is far off. Dialling

  zero is nothing other

  than the negation of his presence.

  So many times I have raised

  the receiver, listening to

  that smooth sound that is technology’s

  purring; and the te
mptation

  has come to experiment

  with the code which would put

  me through to the divine

  snarl at the perimeter of such tameness.

  Strands

  It was never easy.

  There was a part of us,

  trailing uterine

  memories, would have lapsed

  back into Eden, the mindless

  place. There was a part,

  masochistic, terrifying itself

  with a possibility – infinite

  freedom in confrontation

  with infinite love; the idea

  of a balance, where we should come

  to be weighed, lifting horrified

  eyes to a face that was more

  than human. And a part

  amenable to the alternatives:

  nature, mechanism, evolution,

  bearers of a torch kindled

  to illuminate primaeval

  caves that has become electric,

  the probing searchlight piercing

  beyond the galaxies, shocking

  the manipulator of it with its ability

  to discover nothing, the ultimate

  hole the intrepid reason

  has dug for itself.

  Must we

  draw back? Is there a far side

  to an abyss, and can our wings

  take us there? Or is man’s

  meaning in the keeping of himself

  afloat over seventy thousand

  fathoms, tacking against winds

  coming from no direction,

  going in no direction?

  Countering

  Then there is the clock’s

  commentary, the continuing

  prose that is the under-current

  of all poetry. We listen

  to it as, on a desert island,

  men do to the subdued

  music of their blood in a shell.

  Then take my hand that is

  of the bone the island

  is made of, and looking at

  me say what time it is

  on love’s face, for we have

  no business here other than

  to disprove certainties the clock knows.

  April Song

  Withdrawing from the present,

  wandering a past that is alive

  in books only. In love

  with women, outlasted

  by their smiles; the richness

  of their apparel puts

  the poor in perspective.

  The brush dipped in blood

  and the knife in art

  have preserved their value.

  Smouldering times: sacked

  cities, incinerable hearts,

  and the fledgling God

  tipped out of his high

  nest into the virgin’s lap

  by the incorrigible cuckoo.

  The Window

  Say he is any man

  anywhere set before the shop window

  of life, full of comestibles

  and jewels; to put out his hand

  is to come up against

  glass; to break it is

  to injure himself.

  Shall he turn

  poet and acquire them

  in the imagination, gospeller

  and extol himself for his abstention

  from them?

  What if he is not

  called? I would put the manufacturers

  there. Let them see the eyes

  staring in, be splashed with the blood

  of the shop-breakers; let them live

  on the poet’s diet, on the pocket-money

  of the priest.

  I see the blinds

  going down in Europe, over the

  whole world: the rich with everything to

  sell, the poor with nothing to buy it with.

  Borders

  Somewhere beyond time’s

  curve civilisation lifted

  its glass rim. There was

  a pretence of light

  for nations to walk by

  through the dark wood, where history

  wintered. Following I came

  to the foretold frontier

  where with a machine’s

  instinct the guns’ nostrils

  flared at the blooms held out

  to them by the flower people.

  Retirement

  I have crawled out at last

  far as I dare on to a bough

  of country that is suspended

  between sky and sea.

  From what was I escaping

  There is a rare peace here,

  though the aeroplanes buzz me,

  reminders of that abyss,

  deeper than sea or sky, civilisation

  could fall into. Strangers

  advance, inching their way

  out, so that the branch bends

  further away from the scent

  of the cloud blossom. Must

  I console myself

  with reflections? There are

  times even the mirror

  is misted as by one breathing

  over my shoulder. Clinging

  to my position, witnessing

  the seasonal migrations,

  I must try to content

  myself with the perception

  that love and truth have

  no wings, but are resident

  like me here, practising

  their sub-song quietly in the face

  of the bitterest of winters.

  Questions

  She should put off modesty

  with her shift. Who said that?

  Should one, then, put off belief

  with one’s collar? The girl enters

  the bed, enters the man’s

  arms to be clasped between sheets

  against the un-love that is all around.

  The priest lies down alone

  face to face with the darkness

  that is the nothing from which nothing

  comes. ‘Love’ he protests, ‘love’

  in spiritual copulation

  with a non-body, hearing the echoes

  dying away, languishing under the owl’s curse.

  What is a bed for? Is there no repose

  in the small hours? No proofing of sleep’s

  stuff against the fretting of stars, thoughts?

  Tell me, then, after the night’s toil

  of loving or praying, is there nothing

  to do but to rise tired and be made

  away with, yawning, into the day’s dream?

  Looking Glass

  There is a game I play

  with a mirror, approaching

  it when I am not there,

  as though to take by surprise

  the self that is my familiar. It

  is in vain. Like one eternally

  in ambush, fast or slow

  as I may raise my head, it raises

  its own, catching me in the act,

  disarming me by acquaintance,

  looking full into my face as often

  as I try looking at it askance.

  The Cast

  ‘Look up’ they said

  at the rehearsal

  of the film. ‘Higher, higher’ –

  (preparing for the monster)

  and the screaming began,

  the nightmare

  from which there is no waking.

  Ah, vertical God,

  whose altitudes are the mathematics

  that confound us,

  what is thought but the mind’s

  scream as it hurtles

  in free-fall down your immense

  side, hurrying everywhere,

  arriving nowhere but at the precipitousness

  of your presence?

  We weigh

  nothing. Is it that you assess

  us by our ability,

  upside down as we are,
/>   to look forward to averages

  that you have left behind?

  Court Order

  ‘My good fool’ he

  who was a king

  said, ‘come hither, perch

  at my side; challenge

  me to make some sport

  with this word “Love”.’ I

  did so, and was tumbled

  into the world without

  cap and bells, to end

  up on a hard

  shoulder, not laughing

  with the rest who knew

  that Friday, it being April,

  was All Fools’ Day.

  Nativity

  The moon is born

  and a child is born,

  lying among white clothes

  as the moon among clouds.

  They both shine, but

  the light from the one

  is abroad in the universe

  as among broken glass.

  Jerusalem

  A city – its name

  keeps it intact. Don’t

  touch it. Let the muezzin’s

  cry, the blood call

  of the Christian, the wind

  from sources desiccated

  as the spirit drift over

  its scorched walls. Time

  devourer of its children

  chokes here on the fact

  it is in high places love

  condescends to be put to death.

  History

  In the morning among colonnades

  a Greek radiance. At mid-day

  time stood vertically between them

  and the answer that was not

  far off. At mid-day somewhere else

  time was appalled, seeing its shadow

  dislocated by a body the issues

  of which were for the conversion

  of a soldier. Civilisation rounded

  towards its afternoon, the languid siesta

  of brawn and muscle. The monks’ pupils

  contracted through peering into

  the reformed light. A vessel took off

  into navigable waters to discover how mutinous

  was the truth. As the sun went down

  the lights came on in a million

  laboratories, as the scientists attempted

  to turn the heart’s darkness into intellectual day.

  A Thicket in Lleyn

  I was no tree walking.

  I was still. They ignored me,

  the birds, the migrants

  on their way south. They re-leafed

  the trees, budding them

 

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