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    Collected Poems

    Page 38
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      We don’t care why or how.

      We’re happy enough with now.

      No discomfort, no disease,

      Gentlemen living at their ease,

      Everything designed to please

      In good Victoria’s reign.

      Darwin, Marx, electric light,

      The Church of England taking fright

      As new ideas put old to flight

      Were they right, I wonder –

      Stay as you are, refuse to move,

      Stick in your comfortable groove,

      Sheltered from storm and thunder.

      But destiny beckons me yonder

      To dare the unknown, unseen.

      Back to my time machine.

      WORDS GETTING IN THE WAY

      The man without words

      Wants to be in love

      Without words getting in the way.

      What words could match

      Her fairness of face?

      What words could catch

      Her grace?

      The language of birds

      In the blue above –

      Even that’s unequipped to say

      In the magic sand

      What magic she brings

      To all surround-

      Ing things.

      Why should I waste

      Time and brain and breath

      On what bores me to dusty death?

      Let me taste

      Her lips, not your words on mine –

      Entwine her within my strong embrace

      To a wordless man like this

      A sigh can say no more

      Than all of your bor-

      Ing intellectual play.

      How can I kiss

      With words getting in the way?

      I’m sick of each day

      With each tiresome tome

      That you drag from a special shelf.

      I know a tree

      Where poetry may

      Proceed to hang itself

      I’m sick of each night

      That I spend at home

      With a polysyllabic theme.

      Insipid alien

      Sesquipedalian writings

      Make me scream

      Don’t answer me when

      I ask once again:

      By all that’s sacred, how may

      I hold her tight

      With words getting in the way?

      No matter how powerful or subtle or fine

      I’m weary of working with words that you write

      An actor enacting another man’s lines

      But now that I’m seeing her, now it’s tonight

      The things I must say are the things I must say.

      It’s she and it’s I,

      It’s her and it’s me –

      No one but we

      Tonight.

      No poet need try

      To fly in the way

      Singing’s the right

      Sonnets to say.

      It’s she and it’s me,

      And I and it’s her –

      And I prefer

      It so.

      As soon as I see

      The flame on her cheek,

      Then I will know

      Just how to speak

      I’m sick of each day

      With each tiresome tome

      That you keep on a special shelf.

      I know a tree

      Where poetry

      May proceed to hang itself.

      ‘SLAVERY’

      Slavery slavery

      Which he’s dressed up in his bravery

      Up to some unsavoury escapades

      I’m made

      To moan in my slavery.

      Slavery slavery

      Which he’s returned from his knavery

      Full of what he gave her and she gave him

      I grimly groan in my slavery.

      Slavery

      Oh the anguish

      No language

      Cut off from my culture,

      Served from my sect

      The viper and the vulture

      The tribal dialect

      with a loincloth round my middle

      And a priest upon the griddle

      I would gambol to a fiddle

      Made of human gut

      But I’m cut

      Off

      ‘NONE BUT THE COWARD’

      None but the coward

      Deserves the fair, for

      Brave men die

      But the coward’s always there.

      What should a woman

      Supremely care for –

      Two live arms

      Or a statue in the square?

      I admit that bull or rogue ram

      Will need an eventual butcher’s knife

      But it’s not in my programme –

      A medium sensual sort of life.

      I don’t like to eat

      Meat raw in my paw,

      I prefer it dressed by my wife

      Hardly empowered

      To get in there,

      I’d rather survive

      And thrive

      And if you’re agreeable, wive.

      And, like every coward,

      Stay alive.

      I am, let one imagine

      Lord Hamlet – one imagin-

      -ation that can take in every side,

      But wide to take a murder in its stride.

      But not wide enough.

      ‘HE BOUGHT ME FROM A SARACEN’

      He bought me from a Saracen

      Who bought from some Turks

      Who used me in the garrison

      To build the public works.

      Though he keeps me in food

      And no longer in the nude

      …

      He bought me from a Grecian

      Minister of works

      Who’d bought me from a Venetian

      Who bought me from the Turks

      Who’d bought me from the Arabs

      ‘SEVILLA, SEVIYA – OR SEVIJA’

      Sevilla, Seviya, Sevija – or Seville.

      Call it what you will

      It’s the same town,

      Not a tame town – no shame at all

      Nothing much happens in the morning:

      They’re recovering from the evening.

      Nothing much happens in the afternoon:

      They’re waiting for the moonlight to fall

      On Sevilla, Seviya, Sevija – or Seville.

      Come here when you will.

      Crane your necks at

      All the sex at your beck and call.

      ‘I LOVE HATE’

      I love hate.

      The teeth that growl and grate

      And bate me.

      So hate me.

      Hate is the wind

      That sweeps the winter clean,

      Scoured and unskinned

      By the gold and green.

      As for love,

      And the dove-cooing lies

      And the eyes that glow –

      Love can get up and go.

      So hate me, hate me,

      Make me tough.

      I hate love,

      I love hate.

      I’d love the world more

      If it would hate me enough.

      Hate is the state

      That turns men tough

      I’d adore

      The world more

      If it would only hate me enough.

      Hate me.

      Hate.

      A TIME FOR MUSIC

      You’ve got to liv wiv zest Liz luv

      If you farm port of a roman fleueve

      On the riverain on the sane side

      Where I’ll fake you for a ride,

      An Avon of a joke

      Inn Eden where you’ve been rest to soak

      Down the wurling Winderpool

      Of a swashbuckling machine,

      Bint shrunk into a minikin.

      It’s a long ford that has no crossing

      And its lakes a tot of frank pakenhamming

      With hots of katzenjamming

      Chopping up the best back notes

      To fate you
    with flewts and notes

      And a host of hobos.

      I hope I’ve taught your dido heart

      Numbling your private parts

      In an anthem of praise I’ve raised

      A cannibal in a hamilcart;

      I shope itsall bean great greene fun

      Liz luv and you’ve slept your cool

      Sunlike a river hooligan

      Assort of Rogue Riderhood cum again

      In a bally Volga boat-school

      My dearest moneybun

      ‘WHAT I’D LIKE TO DO’

      What I’d like to do

      To you

      Is too painful to be true.

      I’d like to

      Thrust here

      Grind there

      Behind there.

      Ooooo –

      What I’d like to do to you!

      ‘EIGHT AND TWENTY YEARS’

      Eight and twenty years

      The Scythians scourged Asia

      With insolence and oppression

      But King Cyaxares smote them,

      Smote them, smote them,

      Brought them low.

      King Cyaxares – praise him –

      Toppled Nineveh’s towers.

      King Cyaxares – praise him –

      Had the Assyrian by the beard.

      Lo, the empire of the Medes

      Stretches almost to Babylon.

      Praise the son of Cyaxares,

      Our noble Astyages,

      Who keeps the peace

      And maintains our empires.

      ‘TO BE A KING, TO BE A KING’

      To be a king, to be a king

      Is a high and mighty thing.

      The one who’s wise and not the fool

      Shall wear the crown and rule.

      And rule.

      To be a king, to be a king

      Is a high and mighty thing.

      The one who’s strong and also clever

      Shall wear the crown for ever.

      For ever.

      To be a king, a king

      Is a mighty thing.

      He who’s wise and not the fool

      Shall rule and rule.

      To be a king, a king

      Is a mighty thing.

      He who’s strong and clever

      Shall rule for ever.

      ‘A DRINK. WHAT IS A DRINK?’

      A drink. What is a drink?

      A machine for cooling the throat,

      Injecting speedy sugar into the pancreas,

      Getting high.

      Eating’s not a feast.

      It’s an existential function.

      Administering extreme unction,

      The waiter’s not a priest.

      A drink. What do they think a drink is? What is a drink?

      A machine to wet the dry.

      For sugaring the pancreas.

      For getting high.

      Highballs.

      I don’t like it

      What? I like it.

      I don’t like it.

      What? Liking it.

      Liking these folks

      Who like to be slaves

      Liking their cokes

      And Gillette shaves

      Liking their bosses

      And buses and bikes

      Like the likes and dislikes.

      The people don’t talk

      They bully or whine,

      They snort or they squeak

      I don’t like it.

      What? Your liking it.

      I don’t like it.

      What? Your not

      Liking me liking it.

      How do you stomach

      The stuff that they scoff?

      Even its look

      Puts me off.

      BED

      ‘Rest’, says my bed.

      ‘When all is said,

      Rest, rest is best.

      The day is fled,

      All red,

      Into the west.

      Forget, forget

      The men you met,

      The book you read,

      The bread you ate.

      Sleep lies ahead.

      Rest your head,

      Heavier than

      A chest of lead.

      I am ready

      To hold your heavy head

      Steady,

      Steady,

      Steady.’

      ‘Heady.’

      Ho hez hy hed.

      BEAR

      ‘See – there, there.’

      Where?

      ‘There –

      A hairless bear,

      Walking about the square.’

      But you shouldn’t stare

      At a hairless bear.

      You wouldn’t care

      For folk to stare

      If you didn’t have

      Your share of hair,

      Like that poor bear there,

      That hairless bear,

      That bare bear,

      Bare bear –

      ‘Black sheep?’

      No, that hairless bear

      Glaring around

      The square.

      ‘I’M WEARY OF WORKING WITH WORDS THAT YOU WRITE’

      I’m weary of working with words that you write

      An actor enacting another man’s lines.

      But now that I’m seeing her, now it’s tonight,

      The things I must say are the things I must say.

      It’s she and it’s I,

      It’s her and it’s me –

      No one but we

      Tonight.

      No poet need try

      To fly in my way

      Justify the night

      Say sonnets to say.

      It’s she and it’s me,

      It’s I and it’s her –

      And I prefer

      It so.

      As soon as I see

      The flame on her cheek,

      Then I will know

      Just how to speak

      ‘HOW DARE I DARE TO DREAM’

      How dare I dare to dream

      That all I dream is in vain?

      And dare I dare believe

      That sweet joy

      Springs from pain?

      How dare I dare to hope

      That such a lowly thing as I

      Could steal himself a pair silver wings

      And fly,

      To dare the heavens

      Where she in beauty

      Dares me –

      Unworthy me,

      How dare I head the call

      That bids me claim the final prize?

      I’d stumble and I’d fall – before her eyes.

      How dare I dare to dream

      That all I dream is not in vain?

      And dare I dare believe

      That sweetness

      Springs from you

      How dare I dare to hope

      That such a lowly thing as I

      Could steal himself a pair of silver wings

      And fly.

      To dare the heavens

      Where she in beauty

      Dares men

      Unworthy me

      How dare I hear the call

      That bids me claim the final prize?

      I’d stumble and I’d fall – before her eyes

      ‘HIS BOWELS ARE OF GOLD, HIS VEINS OF SILVER’

      His bowels are of gold, his veins of silver.

      The blood of his veins is rubies fine-powdered.

      His head is a city, strong of wall and turret,

      His member is the straightest tree of the forest…

      ‘I’M SICK OF A KINGDOM WHICH IS A JEWELLED PRISON’

      I am sick of a kingdom which is a jewelled prison,

      Of the wine of bondage and the roasted meats of

      servitude.

      Give me the free wind of the morning and the sun

      that burns not from malice,

      And the brook for wine and the berries and nuts

      of the wild wood.

      I am sick of kinds and princes, for their words

      are an emptiness,

      Their favour is water in a furnace, their smiles

     
    ; are shadows.

      A voice within says: the king is but a king,

      But you Gyzat, are a man and a free man.

      Your nobility outreaches the king’s hand and

      outtops his crown.

      ‘LEX FOR LAW AND ORDER’

      Lex for law and order,

      Peace within our border,

      Factory wheels are turning,

      Here’s an end of yearning.

      Loyal hearts are burning

      With patriotic joy.

      Lex is our boy.

      ‘I WOULDN’T FRIRK URANUS’

      I wouldn’t frirk Uranus,

      He gives me a pain in the anus.

      I wouldn’t frirk with Neptune,

      Neptune’s tune is not a hep tune.

      So pounce on me, Puma.

      You’re no idle rumor, right?

      I’m in the humor,

      So pounce on me, Puma, tonight.

      I don’t want to frirk with Mars.

      Mars is covered with stars and scars.

      I don’t want to frirk with Venus,

      That blind kid Cupid would get between us.

      So pounce on me, Puma, etc.

      ‘HERE ON THE FINAL PYRE’

      Here on the final pyre

      See that page with its curled ends

      Rolling into the fire.

      Here’s what the poet sang:

      This is the way the world ends:

      Not with a whimper. BANG.

      ‘A BIRD SAT HIGH ON A BANYAN TREE’

      A bird sat high on a banyan tree,

      Carolling night and carolling day,

      And on the heads of the passers-by

      And each bemerded passer-by

      Cried loud in anger on that bird

      Carolling night and carolling day,

      Wiping from his eye.

      And still that bird upon the tree,

      Carolling night and carolling day,

      Ignored the plaints of the passers-by.

      Let us like birds upon the tree,

      Carolling night and carolling day,

      Ignore each hairless passer-by,

      And say…

      ‘BEASTS AND MEN ARE MADE THE SAME’

      Beasts and men are made the same –

      Here a one and there a two,

      And with these three they play the game

      Of doing what they have to do.

      ‘OH, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE’

      Oh, love, love, love –

      Love on a hilltop high,

      Love against a cloudless sky,

      Love where the scene is

      Painted by a million stars,

      Love with martinis

     


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