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    Collected Poems

    Page 21
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      You talk of the big invisible God who has brought us

      Out of Egypt and into the bondage of sheep-dung.

      And they don’t understand.’ – ‘He will make them understand,

      My brother.’ She said: ‘You used to be the great explainer.

      He was supposed to be slow of speech. Well, talking

      Is not enough now. What are you going

      To do?’ Roused, he cried: ‘Will you understand

      What I say now? I will show them what God is,

      Not talk and explain, but show. They need an

      Image for their poor minds to cling to. They must

      See the strength of God. He carries the sun and the moon

      On his brow. He has the power of all the

      Beasts of the earth and yet he is gentle, loving.

      But that is not God: it is but a picture of God.’ –

      ‘Time to get up,’ she said. ‘You have ruling to do.’

      So that very morning the treasure hoard swung open,

      And the gold and silver and jewels of the Israelites

      Were brought in baskets joyously while Aaron explained

      To the craftsmen and artists what was to be made. One art,

      The art of song, was fired while the kiln was built

      And the fire puffed within it, and the song was sung

      By the people, joyous, their eyes at last to be fed

      With something other than promises:

      His head is the sun,

      He carries the moon on his brow,

      His limbs are the north, the west,

      The east, the south,

      And his breath the winds thereof.

      His coat is speckled with the stars.

      He strides in power over all the world.

      Halleluiah halleluiah.

      11

      THE GOLDEN CALF

      Out of the fire came an indeterminate lump

      Of fused gold and silver, but mostly gold,

      And the craftsmen worked on it: it became

      An indeterminate beast with a crescent moon

      On its brow like horns, so that a certain child

      Cried: ‘That’s it – that what I saw that time

      When we walked through the water – up in the sky it was,

      A baby bull.’ The father said: ‘A calf, you mean,

      A bull-calf. I see. Like that, was it? A heavenly bull-calf.’

      And the parents smiled at each other: Children. Soon

      On a rough tumulus the image was ready to be raised

      And blocked into place with stone. Aaron was there,

      And Aaron spoke to the people who watched, saying: ‘Listen,

      Children of Israel, you have asked for gods.

      You were wrong to do so, sinful indeed, but the sin

      Sprang mostly from ignorance and from inability

      To grasp what great thing has happened to us.’ (The craftsmen

      Polished the back, the horns, the blunt muzzle.) ‘For what has happened

      Is this: we have been chosen by God himself

      – Not by gods, not even by a king of gods, but by God,

      The one true indivisible God who made us

      And made everything. At this moment my brother Moses,

      Our leader, our giver of laws, is in converse with the

      Voice of God on the mountain top. The voice he hears

      Is perhaps his own voice, animated by God,

      For God has no voice as a man has a voice. God

      Has no body, God is in no one place.

      God is spirit, and spirit is unshackled by the

      Chains of time and space. God is everywhere.

      The image you see before you is not God –

      The very idea is absurd. But it will serve

      To remind you of God, each day as you pass it. God

      Is strength, and this is an image of strength – its head

      The sun, the moon on its forehead, its limbs the four

      Corners of the world. But it is a loving strength,

      A mild strength, the strength of an eternal being

      That will never use its strength against us.’ The child cried:

      ‘A bull-calf, that’s what it is,’ and the people smiled

      And Aaron smiled, saying: ‘It is not what it looks like

      That is important. What is important is that you

      See in it an image of our unity as a people

      Chosen by the one true God. At last the silver and gold

      Of the Egyptians who enslaved us have been put to

      Holy use – the profane made holy, remember that.

      What was hidden away is now here to be seen by all

      – The richness of a people’s unity – (And now there were jewels for eyes)

      And the ultimate unthinkable richness of God himself,

      Whose silver is the moon, whose gold the sun,

      Whose jewels the eternal constellations of heaven.’

      He smiled at the applause, but Miriam,

      Standing near with her children, did not smile,

      Nor smiled when, in huge moonlight, the young danced about it,

      Singing:

      Where will our wedding breakfast be?

      Up in the fronds of a dikla tree.

      What will we drink? What will we eat?

      The moon for wine and the sun for meat.

      As the old sat by, approving, a bit of life in the evening

      Now. ‘It has become the centre of life,’ smiled Aaron.

      ‘A gathering place for talk and play. It is as if we were

      Building a city.’ But Miriam said: ‘Not for long,

      Not for that long. I saw some old men this morning

      Touching it for luck, as they said. And there was a

      Young man giving thanks.’ – ‘It is good to give thanks,’

      Said Aaron. – ‘Thanks to an image?’ Miriam said.

      ‘His wish had come true, something to do with a girl,

      And he said that thing was magical.’ – ‘Harmless, Miriam,

      Harmless. A simple people needs something simple

      To feed its senses.’ – ‘Wait,’ said Miriam. ‘Wait.’

      And one evening, the moon still huge, Dathan and his wife

      Sat drinking palm-wine, the three thieves with them, and he said:

      ‘Can you get any more of this stuff?’ – ‘What do we buy it with?’

      Said the wall-eyed one. ‘That chunk of gold up there?’ –

      ‘Risky,’ said the angelic one. ‘I somehow doubt

      That you’d get away with it.’ – ‘Well,’ Dathan said,

      ‘I’d rather drunk this than drink that smoke that the

      Young ones drink, snuff up rather, that grass that grows

      By the wall. Visions of golden cities,

      That’s what it’s said to give you. Men of my age,

      It makes us sick’. Dathan’s wife tipsily sang:

      ‘Where will our wedding breakfast be?’ – ‘I’d rather,’

      Dathan said, ‘drink this than take that smoke stuff’.–

      ‘Some of the tribe of Judah,’ said the soldierly thief,

      ‘Mash up dates and add honey and water. It bubbles,

      Bubbles you know.’ – ‘I suppose it’s against the law,’

      Said the angelic thief, his gold hair moon-ensilvered. –

      ‘Nothing,’ Dathan said, ‘is against the law,

      Because there is no law. It has to be written down,

      Then it becomes law. Not that anybody can read it,

      Except those that pretend they can. The bondage

      Of unintelligible signs. That is well put,

      Remember that.’ And Dathan’s wife went: ‘Unin-

      Telligibubble.’ – ‘He’s coming down soon’,

      Said the soldierly thief. ‘Still, I suppose it’s

      Time we knew where we stood. Then we get the law.’ –

      ‘We ought to have a sort of celebration,’

      Dathan said, ‘no
    t when he gets here, but before.

      I suppose he’ll have a law against celebrations,

      All nicely carved out.’ – ‘What will we celebrate?’

      Asked the angel. – ‘Oh’, said Dathan, ‘we’ll think of

      Something or other’ – ‘Rother,’ giggled his wife.

      But it was not till the new moon that something or other

      Got into the people, helped by palm-wine, date-wine.

      Some drunken women were singing Miriam’s song

      About the effigy:

      His strength is the strength of the bull that charges in thunder,

      His wonder is in the flow of the seed of men.

      Again and again, above in the sky and under

      The sky, in gold noon and the moon’s gold,

      His power and wonder are told.

      Halleluiah halleluiah.

      Some of the young sang their marriage song, and others

      Drank smoke, while some of their elders kept to date-wine,

      Date-wine. All very harmless: the young dancing about

      The effigy, the old clapping their hands

      To the rough music. Harmless enough perhaps

      The fixing, by drunken women, to the effigy’s loins,

      And Dathan swinging grinning with a pair of pomegranates.

      But then the calf was jerked, to cheers, from its plinth,

      Brought down to strong young shoulders, carried about

      In song, while the tremulous old touched it, praying

      For an end of the journey, for all to go well. Song

      And a claw-buttock dance behind it, one young girl

      Shedding her garments one by one in the dance,

      Then by two young men, screaming and laughing.

      Aaron and Miriam were far from all this, tending

      A sick child in a distant tent, Aaron saying

      (And the child was the child who had had the vision) to the mother:

      ‘The fever must come to its height. And then, we hope,

      He will grow cool again. Give him nothing to drink

      But bathe his forehead.’ – ‘Listen,’ Miriam said.

      He listened, both listened. ‘So’, she said, ‘it is come.

      God help us.’ They hurried, meeting on the way

      Grave members of the tribe of Levi: We can do

      Nothing. We always knew it was a

      Grave mistake. Graven images. Aaron saw,

      Miriam saw a woman, near naked, on the ground,

      And the calf’s phallus in pretended hammering rut,

      The calf in strong arms, and cheers and cheers,

      The old, clawing buttocks, dancing, men and women,

      Men and men, in a dance mime of sodomy,

      The young, mad on the smoke they had drunk, dancing

      Crazed dances of their own, a hugely corpulent

      Sot draining, to cheers, a carboy of palm-wine,

      And Caleb, crying for order, sense, near-trampled,

      And other Levites brutally stricken with staves.

      ‘God help us,’ Miriam said. ‘You see what it is –

      They are back to the worship of – Wasted, all wasted.’

      ‘I will speak to them’, Aaron said. ‘Let me mount the

      Plinth.’ (Was that woman Zipporah, was that

      Zipporah?) An obese matron, naked,

      Pig-squealed, pleasured by a skeletal youth. Aaron smote,

      Smote with his stave, mounting. ‘Listen,’ he cried.

      ‘Listen.’ And a few turned and groaned and cheered.

      ‘Brothers and sisters – children of Israel – listen.

      Return to your dwelling at once, under pain of death.

      Sin, sin – the Lord sees – the Lord will strike.’ Cheers,

      And many were swift to drag him down, drowning his shouts,

      Stripped him, thrust a jug of wine to his

      Shouting mouth, dragged him into the throng.

      (Far above, on Horeb, Joshua,

      Tending his night fire, thought he heard revelling,

      Riot, war. He turned to the cloud, heard a

      Stronger noise of hammer and chisel on stone,

      And a kind of – or did he imagine it only? –

      Disheartened thunder.) Dancing, rutting,

      The disrobing of a screaming boy by men who

      Slavered in lust. Lust, drunken fighting,

      And Dathan, drunk, screaming ecstatic: ‘There has to be

      A sacrifice, the god wants a sacrifice’ pointing

      Among cheers and growls to a trembling girl. Miriam

      Stood in Aaron’s place, hardly heard: ‘Cannot you

      Understand? This is another kind of

      Slavery. God, the true God, sees all and will punish

      Terribly. Turn away from your sin before it is

      Too late.’ A cloud covered the thin moon,

      And some, in slow fear, looked up. ‘A sign,’ she cried.

      Then the cloud passed. ‘Cease your wickedness.

      God will forgive, God will understand.’ But they

      Dragged her down, stripping and beating her, lifting

      The battered dull gold effigy to its old place,

      Holding the terrified naked girl beneath

      A jagged slab, while a gross lout as priest

      Prayed gibberish to the calf – O guk O guk

      Bondage of unintelligibubble. Gaaaaaar!

      And he raised the knife and plunged, plunged

      Till he was tired of plunging. Horror, awe,

      Joy. He covered his arms and head with blood,

      He daubed the loins of the calf in it, and now

      The calf surged about, dripping in blood,

      Anointing their own loins. They brought a boy,

      Already stunned with a sharp rock, and rent him,

      And some drank the blood and chewed and spat out

      The rent flesh. (A drunk made slobbering love

      To a woman equally drunk, and, equally drunk,

      Another man wrestled with him in jealousy

      And then took a stone and spilled his brains.

      All brains and blood about them, he and she

      Made slobbering love.) The dull gold effigy

      Was everywhere daubed with blood and brains and seed

      And, like red seed, blood dripped from its loins.

      Battered and sobbing, Miriam crawled to her tent

      And found Eliseba there, and the children, safe,

      But where was Zipporah? The moon was setting.

      The faintest dawn-streaked flushed. And high on Horeb

      Moses emerged from the cloud, under his arms

      Two tablets, intricately carved, grim, growing gentle

      As he bade the sleeping Joshua awake.

      Joshua looked up, saw the tablets, saw

      A kind of white light about the head of Moses,

      And, seeing, knelt. ‘Rise, Joshua,’ he was told.

      ‘We have mischief below. We must go down to the mischief.’

      So they descended as dawn grew, till at length,

      From a ridge above the encampment, they saw enough:

      A beast of metal drunkenly on a plinth,

      Daubed with dried blood, some of it flaking off,

      A naked body, too mauled to show its sex,

      Men and women sleeping naked, corpses,

      Bloody everywhere, odd whimpering cries

      From sources unseen, half-devoured whole sheep,

      The flies already at their work, shattered wine jugs,

      Blood. ‘Call’, said Moses quietly. ‘Call, Joshua.’

      So Joshua put his hollowed hands to his cheeks

      And called a long sound. He called and called.

      Some stirred, then slept again, moaning. Some

      Stirred and listened and wondered, dazed, then saw

      Dried blood in the sun. Miriam heard,

      Ceasing to sob, and Aaron, bruised, dry blood on him,

      Heard. Many heard, looking in fear, wonder,

      See
    ing bones, spilt wine, soon, silent in the camp,

      Two men walking. Zipporah, lying alone,

      Blood on her garment, saw: light from his head,

      His, shining, and behind his head an instant

      The battered horns. He did not seem to see her,

      Then Aaron stood before Moses, saying nothing,

      Having nothing to say, then fell down in tears,

      And Moses said, in sadness: ‘Not enough knowledge.

      Never enough. And out of ignorance, evil.

      The work wasted. All the work wasted.’

      In his arms were the stones, painfully chiselled.

      ‘The covenant is broken. We must start again.’

      And soon to an assembled nation, weeping and fearful:

      ‘The covenant is broken. We must start again.

      You said you would accept the covenant.

      But you had no faith, a frail and ignorant people.

      And now the tablets of the law, so lovingly,

      So painfully inscribed, must be smashed to dust.

      For what was accepted in freedom was rejected in freedom.

      Men are born free to do good and free to do ill.

      You chose the latter way. You must suffer for that,

      Suffer, since freedom always has its price.

      You must suffer for that, in modes of suffering

      That soon you will see, hear, smell, taste, feel in the

      Very nerve and the very marrow. But first

      We must perform the rite of the breaking of the covenant.

      So be it.’ And he threw the stones to the earth.

      Aaron and Koreh took stones and broke the stones,

      Ground the stones to dust, sweating. The words

      Were released to the sphere of the spirit, but the stone

      Was dust. ‘We must start again,’ said Moses.

      ‘Once more I ascend the mountain, there to take

      Once more counsel of the Lord our God, but first – ’

      It was evening, and a great fire was being blown

      To white heat. ‘What you worshipped,’ Moses cried,

      ‘Must be your bane. The thing you took unto yourselves

      In the spirit you must now in chastisement take

      Unto yourselves in the flesh. Not all, but some.

      For you are all one people, and it suffices

      That one limb, tooth, nerve, eyeball be enforced

      To shriek out for the entire body to know

      Pain. Pain. I have appointed officers

      Of the tribe of Levi to see that mouths which cried

      In obscene ecstasy shall now, in a diverse mode,

      Cry out. Not all but some, the grosser sinners.

      What you kissed you now must eat and drink.’

      The calf on it plinth was dragged down by the Levites

     


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