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    The Collected Poems of Dylan Thomas

    Page 7
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      To veil belladonna and let the dry eyes perceive

      Others betray the lamenting lies of their losses

      By the curve of the nude mouth or the laugh up the sleeve.

      THE SPIRE CRANES

      The spire cranes. Its statue is an aviary.

      From the stone nest it does not let the feathery

      Carved birds blunt their striking throats on the salt gravel,

      Pierce the spilt sky with diving wing in weed and heel

      An inch in froth. Chimes cheat the prison spire, pelter

      In time like outlaw rains on that priest, water,

      Time for the swimmers’ hands, music for silver lock

      And mouth. Both note and plume plunge from the spire’s hook.

      Those craning birds are choice for you, songs that jump back

      To the built voice, or fly with winter to the bells,

      But do not travel down dumb wind like prodigals.

      AFTER THE FUNERAL

      (In memory of Ann Jones)

      After the funeral, mule praises, brays,

      Windshake of sailshaped ears, muffle-toed tap

      Tap happily of one peg in the thick

      Grave’s foot, blinds down the lids, the teeth in black,

      The spittled eyes, the salt ponds in the sleeves,

      Morning smack of the spade that wakes up sleep,

      Shakes a desolate boy who slits his throat

      In the dark of the coffin and sheds dry leaves,

      That breaks one bone to light with a judgment clout,

      After the feast of tear-stuffed time and thistles

      In a room with a stuffed fox and a stale fern,

      I stand, for this memorial’s sake, alone

      In the snivelling hours with dead, humped Ann

      Whose hooded, fountain heart once fell in puddles

      Round the parched worlds of Wales and drowned each sun

      (Though this for her is a monstrous image blindly

      Magnified out of praise; her death was a still drop;

      She would not have me sinking in the holy

      Flood of her heart’s fame; she would lie dumb and deep

      And need no druid of her broken body).

      But I, Ann’s bard on a raised hearth, call all

      The seas to service that her wood-tongued virtue

      Babble like a bellbuoy over the hymning heads,

      Bow down the walls of the ferned and foxy woods

      That her love sing and swing through a brown chapel,

      Bless her bent spirit with four, crossing birds.

      Her flesh was meek as milk, but this skyward statue

      With the wild breast and blessed and giant skull

      Is carved from her in a room with a wet window

      In a fiercely mourning house in a crooked year.

      I know her scrubbed and sour humble hands

      Lie with religion in their cramp, her threadbare

      Whisper in a damp word, her wits drilled hollow,

      Her fist of a face died clenched on a round pain;

      And sculptured Ann is seventy years of stone.

      These cloud-sopped, marble hands, this monumental

      Argument of the hewn voice, gesture and psalm,

      Storm me forever over her grave until

      The stuffed lung of the fox twitch and cry Love

      And the strutting fern lay seeds on the black sill.

      ONCE IT WAS THE COLOUR OF SAYING

      Once it was the colour of saying

      Soaked my table the uglier side of a hill

      With a capsized field where a school sat still

      And a black and white patch of girls grew playing;

      The gentle seaslides of saying I must undo

      That all the charmingly drowned arise to cockcrow and kill.

      When I whistled with mitching boys through a reservoir park

      Where at night we stoned the cold and cuckoo

      Lovers in the dirt of their leafy beds,

      The shade of their trees was a word of many shades

      And a lamp of lightning for the poor in the dark;

      Now my saying shall be my undoing,

      And every stone I wind off like a reel.

      NOT FROM THIS ANGER

      Not from this anger, anticlimax after

      Refusal struck her loin and the lame flower

      Bent like a beast to lap the singular floods

      In a land strapped by hunger

      Shall she receive a bellyful of weeds

      And bear those tendril hands I touch across

      The agonized, two seas.

      Behind my head a square of sky sags over

      The circular smile tossed from lover to lover

      And the golden ball spins out of the skies;

      Not from this anger after

      Refusal struck like a bell under water

      Shall her smile breed that mouth, behind the mirror,

      That burns along my eyes.

      HOW SHALL MY ANIMAL

      How shall my animal

      Whose wizard shape I trace in the cavernous skull,

      Vessel of abscesses and exultation’s shell,

      Endure burial under the spelling wall,

      The invoked, shrouding veil at the cap of the face,

      Who should be furious,

      Drunk as a vineyard snail, flailed like an octopus,

      Roaring, crawling, quarrel

      With the outside weathers,

      The natural circle of the discovered skies

      Draw down to its weird eyes?

      How shall it magnetize,

      Towards the studded male in a bent, midnight blaze

      That melts the lionhead’s heel and horseshoe of the heart,

      A brute land in the cool top of the country days

      To trot with a loud mate the haybeds of a mile,

      Love and labour and kill

      In quick, sweet, cruel light till the locked ground sprout out,

      The black, burst sea rejoice, The bowels turn turtle,

      Claw of the crabbed veins squeeze from each red particle

      The parched and raging voice?

      Fishermen of mermen

      Creep and harp on the tide, sinking their charmed, bent pin

      With bridebait of gold bread, I with a living skein,

      Tongue and ear in the thread, angle the temple-bound

      Curl-locked and animal cavepools of spells and bone,

      Trace out a tentacle,

      Nailed with an open eye, in the bowl of wounds and weed

      To clasp my fury on ground

      And clap its great blood down;

      Never shall beast be born to atlas the few seas

      Or poise the day on a horn.

      Sigh long, clay cold, lie shorn,

      Cast high, stunned on gilled stone; sly scissors ground in frost

      Clack through the thicket of strength, love hewn in pillars drops

      With carved bird, saint, and sun, the wrackspiked maiden mouth

      Lops, as a bush plumed with flames, the rant of the fierce eye,

      Clips short the gesture of breath.

      Die in red feathers when the flying heaven’s cut,

      And roll with the knocked earth:

      Lie dry, rest robbed, my beast.

      You have kicked from a dark den, leaped up the whinnying light,

      And dug your grave in my breast.

      THE TOMBSTONE TOLD WHEN SHE DIED

      The tombstone told when she died.

      Her two surnames stopped me still.

      A virgin married at rest.

      She married in this pouring place,

      That I struck one day by luck,

      Before I heard in my mother’s side

      Or saw in the looking-glass shell

      The rain through her cold heart speak

      And the sun killed in her face.

      More the thick stone cannot tell.

      Before she lay on a stranger’s bed

      With a hand plunged through her hair,

      Or that rainy tongue b
    eat back

      Through the devilish years and innocent deaths

      To the room of a secret child,

      Among men later I heard it said

      She cried her white-dressed limbs were bare

      And her red lips were kissed black,

      She wept in her pain and made mouths,

      Talked and tore though her eyes smiled.

      I who saw in a hurried film

      Death and this mad heroine

      Meet once on a mortal wall

      Heard her speak through the chipped beak

      Of the stone bird guarding her:

      I died before bedtime came

      But my womb was bellowing

      And I felt with my bare fall

      A blazing red harsh head tear up

      And the dear floods of his hair.

      ON NO WORK OF WORDS

      On no work of words now for three lean months in the bloody

      Belly of the rich year and the big purse of my body

      I bitterly take to task my poverty and craft:

      To take to give is all, return what is hungrily given

      Puffing the pounds of manna up through the dew to heaven,

      The lovely gift of the gab bangs back on a blind shaft.

      To lift to leave from the treasures of man is pleasing death

      That will rake at last all currencies of the marked breath

      And count the taken, forsaken mysteries in a bad dark.

      To surrender now is to pay the expensive ogre twice.

      Ancient woods of my blood, dash down to the nut of the seas

      If I take to burn or return this world which is each man’s work.

      A SAINT ABOUT TO FALL

      A saint about to fall,

      The stained flats of heaven hit and razed

      To the kissed kite hems of his shawl,

      On the last street wave praised

      The unwinding, song by rock,

      Of the woven wall

      Of his father’s house in the sands,

      The vanishing of the musical ship-work and the chucked bells,

      The wound-down cough of the blood-counting clock

      Behind a face of hands,

      On the angelic etna of the last whirring featherlands,

      Wind-heeled foot in the hole of a fireball,

      Hymned his shrivelling flock,

      On the last rick’s tip by spilled wine-wells

      Sang heaven hungry and the quick

      Cut Christbread spitting vinegar and all

      The mazes of his praise and envious tongue were worked in flames and shells.

      Glory cracked like a flea.

      The sun-leaved holy candlewoods

      Drivelled down to one singeing tree

      With a stub of black buds,

      The sweet, fish-gilled boats bringing blood

      Lurched through a scuttled sea

      With a hold of leeches and straws,

      Heaven fell with his fall and one crocked bell beat the left air.

      O wake in me in my house in the mud

      Of the crotch of the squawking shores,

      Flicked from the carbolic city puzzle in a bed of sores

      The scudding base of the familiar sky,

      The lofty roots of the clouds.

      From an odd room in a split house stare,

      Milk in your mouth, at the sour floods

      That bury the sweet street slowly, see

      The skull of the earth is barbed with a war of burning brains and hair.

      Strike in the time-bomb town,

      Raise the live rafters of the eardrum,

      Throw your fear a parcel of stone

      Through the dark asylum,

      Lapped among herods wail

      As their blade marches in

      That the eyes are already murdered,

      The stocked heart is forced, and agony has another mouth to feed.

      O wake to see, after a noble fall,

      The old mud hatch again, the horrid

      Woe drip from the dishrag hands and the pressed sponge of the forehead,

      The breath draw back like a bolt through white oil

      And a stranger enter like iron.

      Cry joy that this witchlike midwife second

      Bullies into rough seas you so gentle

      And makes with a flick of the thumb and sun

      A thundering bullring of your silent and girl-circled island.

      ‘IF MY HEAD HURT A HAIR’S FOOT’

      ‘If my head hurt a hair’s foot

      Pack back the downed bone. If the unpricked ball of my breath

      Bump on a spout let the bubbles jump out.

      Sooner drop with the worm of the ropes round my throat

      Than bully ill love in the clouted scene.

      ‘All game phrases fit your ring of a cockfight:

      I’ll comb the snared woods with a glove on a lamp,

      Peck, sprint, dance on fountains and duck time

      Before I rush in a crouch the ghost with a hammer, air,

      Strike light, and bloody a loud room.

      ‘If my bunched, monkey coming is cruel

      Rage me back to the making house. My hand unravel

      When you sew the deep door. The bed is a cross place.

      Bend, if my journey ache, direction like an arc or make

      A limp and riderless shape to leap nine thinning months.’

      ‘No. Not for Christ’s dazzling bed

      Or a nacreous sleep among soft particles and charms

      My dear would I change my tears or your iron head.

      Thrust, my daughter or son, to escape, there is none, none, none,

      Nor when all ponderous heaven’s host of waters breaks.

      ‘Now to awake husked of gestures and my joy like a cave

      To the anguish and carrion, to the infant forever unfree,

      O my lost love bounced from a good home;

      The grain that hurries this way from the rim of the grave

      Has a voice and a house, and there and here you must couch and cry.

      ‘Rest beyond choice in the dust-appointed grain,

      At the breast stored with seas. No return

      Through the waves of the fat streets nor the skeleton’s thin ways.

      The grave and my calm body are shut to your coming as stone,

      And the endless beginning of prodigies suffers open.’

      TWENTY-FOUR YEARS

      Twenty-four years remind the tears of my eyes.

      (Bury the dead for fear that they walk to the grave in labour.)

      In the groin of the natural doorway I crouched like a tailor

      Sewing a shroud for a journey

      By the light of the meat-eating sun.

      Dressed to die, the sensual strut begun,

      With my red veins full of money,

      In the final direction of the elementary town

      I advance for as long as forever is.

      THE CONVERSATION OF PRAYERS

      The conversation of prayers about to be said

      By the child going to bed and the man on the stairs

      Who climbs to his dying love in her high room,

      The one not caring to whom in his sleep he will move

      And the other full of tears that she will be dead,

      Turns in the dark on the sound they know will arise

      Into the answering skies from the green ground,

      From the man on the stairs and the child by his bed.

      The sound about to be said in the two prayers

      For the sleep in a safe land and the love who dies

      Will be the same grief flying. Whom shall they calm?

      Shall the child sleep unharmed or the man be crying?

      The conversation of prayers about to be said

      Turns on the quick and the dead, and the man on the stairs

      Tonight shall find no dying but alive and warm

      In the fire of his care his love in the high room.

      And the child not caring to whom he climbs his prayer

      Shall drown in a grief as
    deep as his true grave,

      And mark the dark eyed wave, through the eyes of sleep,

      Dragging him up the stairs to one who Mes dead.

      A REFUSAL TO MOURN THE DEATH, BY FIRE, OF A CHILD IN LONDON

      Never until the mankind making

      Bird beast and flower

      Fathering and all humbling darkness

      Tells with silence the last light breaking

      And the still hour

      Is come of the sea tumbling in harness

      And I must enter again the round

      Zion of the water bead

      And the synagogue of the ear of corn

      Shall I let pray the shadow of a sound

      Or sow my salt seed

      In the least valley of sackcloth to mourn

      The majesty and burning of the child’s death.

      I shall not murder

      The mankind of her going with a grave truth

      Nor blaspheme down the stations of the breath

      With any further Elegy of innocence and youth.

      Deep with the first dead lies London’s daughter,

      Robed in the long friends,

      The grains beyond age, the dark veins of her mother,

      Secret by the unmourning water

      Of the riding Thames.

      After the first death, there is no other.

      POEM IN OCTOBER

      It was my thirtieth year to heaven

      Woke to my hearing from harbour and neighbour wood

      And the mussel pooled and the heron

      Priested shore

      The morning beckon

      With water praying and call of seagull and rook

      And the knock of sailing boats on the net webbed wall

      Myself to set foot

      That second

      In the still sleeping town and set forth.

      My birthday began with the water-

      Birds and the birds of the winged trees flying my name

      Above the farms and the white horses

      And I rose

      In rainy autumn

      And walked abroad in a shower of all my days.

      High tide and the heron dived when I took the road

      Over the border

      And the gates

      Of the town closed as the town awoke.

      A springful of larks in a rolling

      Cloud and the roadside bushes brimming with whistling

      Blackbirds and the sun of October

      Summery

      On the hill’s shoulder,

      Here were fond climates and sweet singers suddenly

     


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