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    Collected Poems


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      Collected Poems

      Alan Sillitoe

      CONTENTS

      Preface

      from The Rats and Other Poems, 1960

      Shadow

      Poem Written in Majorca

      Ruth’s First Swim in the Mediterranean, 1952

      Our Dream Last Night

      To Ruth

      Out of my Thousand Voices

      Islands

      Icarus

      Carthage

      Autumn in Majorca

      On a Twin Brother’s Release from a Siberian Prison Camp

      On a Dead Bluebottle

      Picture of Loot

      A Child’s Drawing

      Opposites

      Excerpts from ‘The Rats’

      from A Falling Out of Love and Other Poems, 1964

      Poem Left by a Dead Man

      Cape Finisterre

      Woods

      Storm

      Housewife

      Stars

      Yes

      Dead Man’s Grave

      The Drowned Shropshire Woman

      Car Fights Cat

      Frog in Tangier

      Friend Died

      Guide to the Tiflis Railway

      from Love in the Environs of Voronezh and Other Poems and Storm and Other Poems, 1968 and 1974

      Baby

      Tree

      Ditchling Beacon

      Lizard

      Empty Quarter

      First Poem

      Love’s Mansion

      To Burn Out Love

      Seatalk

      Naked

      Ghosts: What Jason said to Medea

      Hunger

      Hephzibah

      Full Moon’s Tongue

      Silence and Stillness

      Smile

      Chain

      Gulf of Bothnia – On the Way to Russia

      Eurasian Jetnote

      Irkutsk

      Baikal Lake-dusk

      Shaman at Listvyanka

      Toasting

      Railway Station

      Ride it Out

      The Poet

      Left as a Desert

      Love in the Environs of Voronezh

      Goodbye Kursk

      February Poems

      Lovers Sleep

      The Weight of Summer

      Rose

      Creation

      Signal Box

      Barbarians

      Somme

      Alchemist

      View from Misk Hill near Nottingham

      from Snow on the North Side of Lucifer, 1979

      Lucifer’s Astronomy Lesson

      Lucifer: The Official Version of his Fall

      Lucifer Turned

      Lucifer’s Decision

      Unity

      Nimrod and Lucifer

      The ‘Job’

      Lucifer and Empedocles

      Lucifer the Archer

      Lucifer and Columbus

      Lucifer the Surveyor

      Lucifer the Mechanic

      Lucifer and Revolution

      Lucifer Telegraphist

      Hymn to Lucifer

      Lucifer’s Report

      The Last Chance

      Lucifer and Job

      Lucifer and Noah

      Lucifer and Daniel

      Lucifer in Sinai – 1

      Lucifer in Sinai – 4

      The Last

      Goodbye Lucifer

      from Sun Before Departure, 1974–1982

      Horse on Wenlock Edge

      Nottingham Castle

      Oxney

      North Star Rocket

      Fifth Avenue

      The Lady of Bapaume

      Stones in Picardy

      August

      Terrorist

      Rabbit

      Moth

      Fishes

      Thistles

      Release

      Left Handed

      New Moon

      Ophelia

      Alioth the Bigot

      Changing Course

      On First Seeing Jerusalem

      Nails

      Learning Hebrew

      Synagogue in Prague

      Israel

      On an Old Friend Reaching Jerusalem

      Festival

      Yam Kinneret (The Sea of Galilee)

      Ezekiel

      The Rock

      In Israel, Driving to the Dead Sea

      Ein Gedi (After Shirley Kaufman’s essay: ‘The Poet and Place’)

      Eve

      from Tides and Stone Walls, 1986

      Receding Tide

      Bricks

      Landscape – Sennen, Cornwall

      Boarded-up Window

      Derelict Bathing Cabins at Seaford

      Southend Pier

      Derelict Houses at Whitechapel

      After a Rough Sea, at Seaford

      Window, Brighton

      Torn Poster, Venice

      New Poems, 1986–1990

      Camouflage

      Dawn Pigeon

      Early School

      5744

      Fire

      Hiroshima

      Small Ad

      Work

      Dead Tree

      Spring in the Languedoc

      Wakening

      Departure from Poppi

      Living Alone (For Three Months)

      Home

      Pearl

      Lancaster

      Shylock the Writer

      Delacroix’s ‘Liberty Guiding the People’

      The Italian Woman

      The Liberty Tree

      Noah’s Ark

      A Biography of Alan Sillitoe by Ruth Fainlight

      PREFACE

      Unlike a novelist, who may hide behind his fiction for the whole of his writing life, a poet who presents his collected poems displays the emotional history of his heart and soul. Such a record, however seemingly disguised, cannot be falsified, supposing of course that the poems are true to himself, and what poems are not, if they are poems? That is the condition which I have followed in assembling this collection: the assumption that the inner life is more discernible, though perhaps only after diligent searching, than any self-portrayal in a story or novel.

      From seven short volumes written between 1950 and 1990 I have chosen less than half the verse published, and therefore ask myself whether, if the omitted matter were put into another book, would it present a different picture of the state of the heart and soul over the same period? That may be a novelist’s question, but the answer is a fair ‘no’, for the material left out was mostly the fat and gristle surrounding the meat of what is printed here.

      I was surprised at times by the extreme revision most of the poems so obviously needed when, all those years ago, I had considered them indisputably finished. Even so, I can’t imagine that in the years to come I shall see any cause to amend them again. Though I shall no doubt look into the book from time to time, I shall no more be tempted to re-write than I am when looking into a previously published novel. Only in that way do the novelist and the poet coincide in me, otherwise the two entities are so separate that we might be two different people. Why this is I shall never know, unless there are some things which can never be said in fiction. They simply don’t fit, being drawn from an elevation of the psyche which the novel can know nothing about.

      When I became a writer it was as a poet, but it didn’t take long for fiction to obtrude, perhaps to fill in those spaces which must necessarily exist between one poem and another, my temperament having decided that during my life I could not be permitted to be unoccupied for a moment. Such periods of emptiness, being too fearful to contemplate, were duly filled, and have been so ever since. The unconscious fear of idleness prevents me from brooding too heavily on my fate except in such a way that p
    roduces stories and novels.

      The earliest poems in The Rats volume came while I was working on Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, but all the other poems were written during the progress of various novels. The sentiments deployed in The Rats bled into the views of the hero of my first novel, but from that point on, poetry and fiction came out of totally different territories. A later volume, Tides and Stone Walls, was written to a series of remarkable photographs by Victor Bowley, and the poems chosen from that book are those which in my view rely on the photographs least, though even then they were directly inspired by them. Twenty-one more recent poems at the end of the present book are ‘new’ in that they have not been previously collected.

      The Rats and Other Poems was written by an exile returning to England who, having spent a total of eight years out of the country before the age of thirty, expected to go away again to write in an isolation which he had found congenial. It did not happen, but it has always seemed to me that a poet and writer, wherever he lives, even if on home territory, suffers exile for life. Geography notwithstanding, such displacement is a kind of mental stand-off from the rest of society, giving the detachment to see the surroundings with a calculating eye – not an emotionally cold eye, but one which uses language and observation from a standpoint entirely personal.

      ALAN SILLITOE

      from The Rats and Other Poems, 1960

      SHADOW

      When on a familiar but deserted beach

      You meet a gentleman you recognize

      As your own death, know who he is and teach

      Yourself he comes with flower-blue eyes

      To wipe the salt-spray from all new intentions,

      And kiss you on each sunken cheek to ease

      Into your blood the strength to leave this life:

      (A minor transmutation of disease)

      To watch the mechanism of each arm

      Inside your arms of flesh and fingernail,

      To despise the ancient wild alarm

      Behind each eye. Shaking your hand so frail

      Your own death breathes possessive fire

      (A familiar voice that no one understands)

      Striding quickly, sporting elegant attire,

      Coming towards you on these once deserted sands.

      POEM WRITTEN IN MAJORCA

      Death has no power in these clear skies

      Where olives in December shed their milk:

      Too temperate to strike

      At orange-terraces and archaic moon:

      But Death is strong where hemlock stones

      Stand at the foot of cold Druidic hills;

      There I was born when snow lay

      Under naked willows, and frost

      Boomed along grey ponds at afternoon,

      Frightening birds that

      Though hardened for long winters,

      Fled from the nerve-filled ground,

      Beat their soundless wings away

      From Death’s first inflicted wound.

      RUTH’S FIRST SWIM IN THE MEDITERRANEAN, 1952

      The water that touches your thighs

      Swallowed the STRUMA.

      Water that folded the wings of Icarus

      Climbs your limbs, sharp with salt

      That stiffened the beard of Odysseus.

      Tragedy, comedy, legend and history –

      Invisible wakes through centuries

      Of exiles seeking home:

      You turn and look as if at

      The wandering Ark of the Hebrews,

      Then cleave the waters of your Inland Sea.

      OUR DREAM LAST NIGHT

      You had a dream last night:

      Deep in my primeval sleep

      A match was made between my heart and yours

      And I moved into love with you

      And found your body willing.

      Maybe it began with you

      When deep in your primeval sleep

      A wielding of desire for some

      Fulfilling (too matter of fact

      And clumsy in afternoon or evening)

      Drew me out of some too private dream

      And held us plough to furrow.

      No judgement made, for neither side

      Can settle on the cause,

      And no more thought is here but this:

      What if a birth should come

      Out of our midnight dreams?

      TO RUTH

      If I throw out my arms and strike

      The night that comes, open my heart

      To whoever guards survivors, favours struggles

      Carries sunshine garlanded about

      Her waist, will my fight fail?

      Will I unbuckle my resistance

      In the darkness? Let ice melt

      Fear kill, suffer death to take me?

      Though passion is not greatness

      Nor greatness passion

      When measured by such fluid odds

      As sunlight and death,

      Passion augments

      The alchemy of returning life

      Stands the blood high in its demand,

      Becomes supremely knowing,

      And draws me back

      Into the living battle of our love.

      OUT OF MY THOUSAND VOICES

      Out of my thousand voices

      I speak with one

      To the waves and flying saltfoam,

      Flinging the dovetailed words

      Of a single voice

      At the knife-edged prow

      Of the ship unbreakable

      That carries her away.

      I throw the one remaining voice

      Of all my thousand out to sea

      And watch it curving

      Into the black-paunched water

      Like a falling star,

      A single word of love

      That drops into the grave,

      A thousand echoes falling by her ship.

      ISLANDS

      One great problem poses:

      What is that island we’re passing?

      Green hills, white houses,

      Grey peak, a blue sky,

      Ship sailing smooth.

      These problems arise

      On islands that pass,

      White houses lived in

      And mountains climbed,

      Clouds moving like ships

      And ships like clouds.

      We on deck open baskets for lunch

      To feed the problem of each white island

      Of how steep such contours

      And shallow those bays,

      And who keens that song

      In pinewoods by the shore.

      ‘How beautiful it is’ –

      And how remote, waiting for other islands

      We shall pass, puzzled that the birds

      Can dip their wings at many.

      What is that island we’re passing

      Heartshaped and hemlocked

      Watered by a winding stream?

      A monument to us and we a monument to it –

      A great problem posed

      Till each unanswering island

      Left in darkness grows a separate light:

      Solutions beyond reach:

      Cobalt funereal in the deep sea.

      ICARUS

      The ocean was timeless, blue

      When your unwaxed wings wheeled towards heaven.

      Wind was recalled, emptiness new

      And smooth as Thermopylae’s lagoon given

      To the Heroes’ barge held in repose. Nothing stirred:

      The gods watched and held their breath

      Forgot to stake each others’ wives, heard

      Wings feather the air, dip and climb. Death

      Did not come to Daedalus. The sun

      Heliographed his escaper, watched his prison cloak

      Colouring the sea, shadowing his one

      Track channelled to Italy, whose mirror spoke

      For his safety. Icarus found entirety

      In a gleam from the sun. Was it a lotus-land

      He climbed to? A mission of piety

      Foretelling a les
    ser doom written upon sand

      For older men? Or pure myth? His wings aileroned

      The windless air and carried him in a curve

      Measured by a rainbow’s greatness above the honed

      Earth: lifted him through a mauve

      Loophole of sky. No ships sleeved

      The water and filled a farewell in their sails

      Or circled the fallen wings, or grieved,

      And Daedalus, onward flying, knew no warning fairytales.

      CARTHAGE

      Scorpions lurk under loose stones

      Marked on Leipzig maps, and electric tramways

      Ride shallow loops over thrown-up bones;

      Eternal dust guides shadowed gangways

      To Punic necropolia tombed-out

      In timeless tangents, watched by upstart towers

      Of a young cathedral, basilicas combed-out

      By Time’s long competition and the hours

      Of each’s ruin. The shadows of Jesus

      And Hamilcar and the later dead

      Back up the ancient argument that whims are diced

      Out by the timelessness of heaven. The bled

      Lips of this crumbling village, with the cry

      Of begging children, prove that stone and scorpion lie.

      AUTUMN IN MAJORCA.

      Autumn again: how many more?

      The quiet land broods

      In the peace of hope taken away,

      Like a birth in silence

      Or slipping unnoticed towards Death.

      In the dusk and softness of earth’s evening

      Black figs fall and burst:

      Pig food, earth food

      Tears from the tree’s broad face.

      The familiar wind makes passions tolerable:

      A woman does not know for whom she sings;

      A prophecy of rain when clouds collect

      And the earth in its achievement turns

      But will not breathe.

      ON A TWIN BROTHER’S RELEASE FROM A SIBERIAN PRISON CAMP

      Out of the snow my brother came

      Ghost within ghost like a child’s game

      Of case into case;

      Cloud reflections smashed with wattled feet,

      A coniferous stick wielded to meet

      Face with face.

      Moss-warmed, waist-coated with leaves

      His memory survived to shake my hand,

      Soil-laden fingers

      Reaching from my brother who craves

      Impossibly for the enormous land

      Where no man lingers.

      A surrogate ghost my brother found a road

      Across blue ridges, by marks of axe and woad

     


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