Complete Works of D.H. Lawrence

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Complete Works of D.H. Lawrence Page 852

by D. H. Lawrence

of eternal salt rage; angry is old ocean within a man.

  Desire Goes Down into the Sea

  I — have no desire any more

  towards woman or man, bird, beast or creature or thing.

  All day long I feel the tide rocking, rocking

  though it strikes no shore

  in me.

  Only mid-ocean —

  The Sea, the Sea

  The sea dissolves so much

  and the moon makes away with so much more than we know —

  Once the moon comes down

  and the sea gets hold of us

  cities dissolve like rock-salt

  and the sugar melts out of life

  iron washes away like an old blood-stain

  gold goes out into a green shadow

  money makes even no sediment

  and only the heart

  glitters in salty triumph

  over all it has known, that has gone now into salty nothingness.

  Old Song

  The day is ending, the night descending

  the heart is frozen, the spirit dead;

  but the moon is wending her way, attending

  to other things that are not yet said.

  Good Husbands Make Unhappy Wives

  Good husbands make unhappy wives

  so do bad husbands, just as often;

  but the unhappiness of a wife with a good husband

  is much more devastating

  than the unhappiness of a wife with a bad husband.

  November by the Sea

  Now in November nearer comes the sun

  down the abandoned heaven.

  As the dark closes round him, he draws nearer

  as if for our company.

  At the base of the lower brain

  the sun in me declines to his winter solstice

  and darts a few gold rays

  back to the old year’s sun across the sea.

  A few gold rays thickening down to red

  as the sun of my soul is setting

  setting fierce and undaunted, wintry

  but setting, setting behind the sounding sea between my ribs.

  The wide sea wins, and the dark,

  winter, and the great day-sun, and the sun in my soul

  sinks, sinks to setting and the winter solstice

  downward, they race in decline

  my sun, and the great gold sun.

  Fight! O My Young Men

  Fight! don’t you feel you’re fading

  into slow death?

  Fight then, poor duffers degrading

  your very breath.

  Open your half-dead eyes

  you half-alive young,

  look round and realise

  the muck from which you’ve sprung.

  The money-muck, you simple flowers

  of your forefathers’ muck-heap;

  and the money-muck-worms, the extant powers

  that have got you in keep.

  Old money-worms, young money-worms

  money-worm professors

  spinning a glamour round money, and clergymen

  lifting a bank-book to bless us!

  In the odour of lucrative sanctity

  stand they - and god, how they stink!

  Rise then, my young men, rise at them!

  Or if you can’t rise, just think —

  Think of the world that you’re stifling in,

  think what a world it might be!

  Think of the rubbish you’re trifling in

  with enfeebled vitality!

  And then, if you amount to a hill o’ beans

  start in and bust it all;

  money, hypocrisy, greed, machines

  that have ground you so small.

  Women Want Fighters for Their Lovers

  Women don’t want wistful

  mushy pathetic young men

  struggling in doubtful embraces

  then trying again.

  Mushy and treacherous, tiny

  Peterlets, Georgelets, Hamlets

  Tomlets, Dicklets, Harrylets, whiney

  Jimlets and self-sorry Samlets.

  Women are sick of consoling

  inconsolable youth, dead-beat;

  pouring comfort and condoling

  down the sink of the male conceit.

  Woman want fighters, fighters

  and the fighting cock.

  Can’t you give it them, blighters!

  The fighting cock, the fighting cock —

  have you got one, little blighters?

  Let it crow then, like one o’clock!

  It’s Either You Fight Or You Die

  It’s either you fight or you die

  young gents, you’ve got no option.

  No good asking the reason why

  it’s either to fight or you die

  die, die, lily-liveredly die

  or fight and make the splinters fly

  bust up the holy apple-pie

  you’ve got no option.

  Don’t say you can’t, start in and try;

  give great hypocrisy the lie

  and tackle the blowsy big blow-fly

  of money; do it or die!

  You’ve got no option.

  Don’ts

  Fight your little fight, my boy

  fight and be a man.

  Don’t be a good little, good little boy

  being as good as you can

  and agreeing with all the mealy-mouthed, mealy-mouthed

  truths that the sly trot out

  to protect themselves and their greedy-mouthed, greedy-mouthed

  cowardice, every lout.

  Don’t live up to the dear little girl who costs

  you your manhood, and makes you pay.

  Nor the dear old mater who so proudly boasts

  that you’ll make your way.

  Don’t earn golden opinions, opinions golden,

  or at least worth Treasury notes,

  from all sorts of men; don’t be beholden

  to the herd inside the pen.

  Don’t long to have dear little, dear little boys

  whom you’ll have to educate

  to earn their living; nor yet girls, sweet joys

  who will find it so hard to mate.

  Nor a dear little home, with its cost, its cost

  that you have to pay,

  earning your living while your life is lost

  and dull death comes in a day.

  Don’t be sucked in by the su-superior,

  don’t swallow the culture bait,

  don’t drink, don’t drink and get beerier and beerier,

  do learn to discriminate.

  Do hold yourself together, and fight

  with a hit-hit here and a hit-hit there,

  and a comfortable feeling at night

  that you’ve let in a little air.

  A little fresh air in the money sty,

  knocked a little hole in the holy prison,

  done your little bit, made your own little try

  that the risen Christ should be risen.

  The Risen Lord

  The risen lord, the risen lord

  has risen in the flesh,

  and treads the earth to feel the soil

  though his feet are still nesh.

  The risen lord, the risen lord

  has opened his eyes afresh,

  and sees strange looks on the faces of men

  all held in leash.

  And he says: I never have seen them before,

  these people of flesh;

  these are no spirits caught and sore

  in the physical mesh.

  They are substance itself, that flows in thick

  flame of flesh forever travelling

  like the flame of a candle, slow and quick

  fluttering and softly unravelling.

  It moves, it ripples, and all the time

  it changes, and with it change

  moods, thoughts, desires, and deeds that chime<
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  with the rippling fleshly change.

  I — never saw them, how they must soften

  themselves with oil, and lard

  their guts with a certain fat, and often

  laugh, and laugh hard.

  If they didn’t, if they did not soften

  themselves with oil, and lard

  their guts with a certain fat, and often

  laugh, and laugh hard

  they would not be men, and they must be men,

  they are their own flesh. - I lay

  in the tomb and was not; I have risen again

  to look the other way.

  Lo! I am flesh, and the blood that races

  is me in the narrows of my wrists.

  Lo, I see fear in the twisted faces

  of men, they clench fear in their fists!

  Lo! on the other side the grave

  I — have conquered the fear of death,

  but the fear of life is still here; I am brave

  yet I fear my own breath.

  Now I must conquer the fear of life,

  the knock of the blood in my wrists,

  the breath that rushes through my nose, the strife

  of desires in the loins’ dark twists,

  What do you want, wild loins? and what

  do you want, warm heart? and what

  wide eyes and wondering spirit? - not

  death, no death for your lot!

  They ask, and they must be answered; they

  are, and they shall be, to the end.

  Lo! there is woman, and her way is a strange way,

  I — must follow also her trend.

  I died, and death is neuter; it speaks not, it gives

  no answer; man rises again

  with mouth and loins and needs, he lives

  again man among men.

  So it is, so it will be, for ever and ever.

  And still the great needs of men

  will clamour forth from the flesh, and never

  can denial deny them again.

  The Secret Waters

  What was lost is found

  what was wounded is sound,

  the key of life on the body of men

  unlocks the fountains of peace again.

  The fountains of peace, the fountains of peace

  well softly up for a new increase,

  but they bubble under the heavy wall

  of this house of life that encloses us all.

  They bubble under the heavy wall

  that was once a house, and is now a prison,

  and never a one among us all

  knows that the waters have risen.

  None of us knows, O none of us knows

  the welling of peace when it rises and flows

  in secret under the sickening wall

  of the prison of man that encloses us all.

  And we shall not know, we shall not know

  till the secret water overflow

  and loosen the brick and the hard cement

  of the walls within which our lives are spent.

  Till the walls begin to loosen and crack,

  to gape and our house is going to wrack

  and ruin above us, and the crash of release

  is death to us all, in the marshes of peace.

  Obscenity

  The body of itself is clean, but the caged mind

  is a sewer inside, it pollutes, O it pollutes

  the guts and the stones and the womb, rots them down, leaves a

  rind

  of maquillage53 and pose and malice that would shame the brutes.

  Beware! O My Dear Young Men

  Beware, O my dear young men, of going rotten.

  It’s so easy to follow suit;

  people in their thirties, and the older ones, have gotten

  bad inside, like fruit

  that nobody eats and nobody wants, so it rots, but is not forgotten.

  Rotten inside, they are, and seething

  with small obscenities;

  and they whisper it out, and they titter it out, breathing

  among soft amenities,

  a vapour of rottenness out of their mouths, like sewer-stench

  wreathing.

  And it’s funny, my dear young men, that you in your twenties

  should love the sewer scent

  of obscenity, and lift your noses where the vent is

  and run towards it, bent

  on smelling it all, before your bit of vitality spent is.

  For obscenity, after all, my dear young men

  is only mental dirt,

  the dirty mind like a urinal again

  or a dung squirt;

  and I thought you wanted life and experience, dear young men!

  All this obscenity is just mental, mental, mental,

  it’s the village-idiot mind

  playing with muck; and I thought you young gents experimental

  were out to find

  new life for yourselves and your women, complemental.

  But if obscene village idiots you want to be, then be it.

  But don’t imagine you’ll get

  satisfactory experience from it; can’t you see it?

  the idiot with his chin all wet

  goggling obscenities! If that’s you and your fate, why then, dree it.

  Sex Isn’t Sin

  Sex isn’t sin, ah no! sex isn’t sin,

  nor is it dirty, not until the dirty mind pokes in.

  We shall do as we like, sin is obsolete, the young assert.

  Sin is obsolete, sin is obsolete, but not so dirt.

  And sex, alas, gets dirtier and dirtier, worked from the mind.

  Sex gets dirtier and dirtier, the more it is fooled with, we find.

  And dirt, if it isn’t sin, is worse, so there you are!

  Why don’t you know what’s what, young people? seems to me you’re

  far

  duller than your grandmothers. But leave that aside.

  Let’s be honest at last about sex, or show at least that we’ve tried.

  Sex isn’t sin, it’s a delicate flow between women and men,

  and the sin is to damage the flow, force it up or dirty it or suppress it

  again.

  Sex isn’t something you’ve got to play with; sex is you.

  It’s the flow of your life, it’s your moving self, and you are due

  to be true to the nature of it, its reserve, its sensitive pride

  that it always has to begin with, and by which you ought to abide.

  Know yourself, O know yourself, that you are mortal; and know.

  the sensitive delicacy of your sex, in its ebbing to and fro,

  and the mortal reserve of your sex, as it stays in your depths below.

  And don’t, with the nasty, prying mind, drag if out from its deeps

  and finger it and force it, and shatter the rhythm it keeps

  when it’s left alone, as it stirs and rouses and sleeps.

  O — know yourself, O know your sex! You must know, there is no

  escape.

  You must know sex in order to save it, your deepest self, from the rape

  of the itching mind and the mental self, with its pruriency always

  agape.

  Sex and Trust

  If you want to have sex, you’ve got to trust

  at the core of your heart, the other creature.

  The other creature, the other creature

  not merely the personal upstart;

  but the creature there, that has come to meet you;

  trust it you must, you must

  or the experience amounts to nothing,

  mere evacuation lust.

  The Gazelle Calf

  The gazelle calf, O my children

  goes behind its mother across the desert

  goes behind its mother on blithe bare foot

  requiring no shoes, O my children!

  The Elephant is Slow to Mate

&nb
sp; The elephant, the huge old beast,

  is slow to mate;

  he finds a female, they show no haste

  they wait

  for the sympathy in their vast shy hearts

  slowly, slowly to rouse

  as they loiter along the river-beds

  and drink and browse

  and dash in a panic through the brake

  of forest with the herd,

  and sleep in massive silence, and wake

  together without a word.

  So slowly the great hot elephant hearts

  grow full of desire,

  and the great beasts mate in secret at last,

  hiding their fire.

  Oldest they are and the wisest of beasts

  so they know at last

  how to wait for the loneliest of feasts

  for the full repast.

  They do not snatch, they do not tear;

  their massive blood

  moves as the moon-tides, near, more near

  till they touch in flood.

  Little Fish

  The tiny fish enjoy themselves

  in the sea.

  Quick little splinters of life,

  their little lives are fun to them

  in the sea.

  The Mosquito Knows

  The mosquito knows full well, small as he is

  he’s a beast of prey.

  But after all

  he only takes his bellyful,

  he doesn’t put my blood in the bank.

  Self-Pity

  I — never saw a wild thing

  sorry for itself.

  A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough

 

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