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    The Collected Poems of Dylan Thomas

    Page 8
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      Come in the morning where I wandered and listened

      To the rain wringing

      Wind blow cold

      In the wood faraway under me.

      Pale rain over the dwindling harbour

      And over the sea wet church the size of a snail

      With its horns through mist and the castle

      Brown as owls

      But all the gardens

      Of spring and summer were blooming in the tall tales

      Beyond the border and under the lark full cloud.

      There could I marvel

      My birthday

      Away but the weather turned around.

      It turned away from the blithe country

      And down the other air and the blue altered sky

      Streamed again a wonder of summer

      With apples

      Pears and red currants

      And I saw in the turning so clearly a child’s

      Forgotten mornings when he walked with his mother

      Through the parables

      Of sun light

      And the legends of the green chapels

      And the twice told fields of infancy

      That his tears burned my cheeks and his heart moved in

      mine.

      These were the woods the river and sea

      Where a boy

      In the listening

      Summertime of the dead whispered the truth of his joy

      To the trees and the stones and the fish in the tide.

      And the mystery

      Sang alive

      Still in the water and singingbirds.

      And there could I marvel my birthday

      Away but the weather turned around. And the true

      Joy of the long dead child sang burning

      In the sun.

      It was my thirtieth

      Year to heaven stood there then in the summer noon

      Though the town below lay leaved with October blood.

      O may my heart’s truth

      Still be sung

      On this high hill in a year’s turning.

      THIS SIDE OF THE TRUTH

      (for Llewelyn)

      This side of the truth,

      You may not see, my son,

      King of your blue eyes

      In the blinding country of youth,

      That all is undone,

      Under the unminding skies,

      Of innocence and guilt

      Before you move to make

      One gesture of the heart or head,

      Is gathered and spilt

      Into the winding dark

      Like the dust of the dead.

      Good and bad, two ways

      Of moving about your death

      By the grinding sea,

      King of your heart in the blind days,

      Blow away like breath,

      Go crying through you and me

      And the souls of all men

      Into the innocent

      Dark, and the guilty dark, and good

      Death, and bad death, and then

      In the last element

      Fly like the stars’ blood,

      Like the sun’s tears,

      Like the moon’s seed, rubbish

      And fire, the flying rant

      Of the sky, king of your six years.

      And the wicked wish,

      Down the beginning of plants

      And animals and birds,

      Water and light, the earth and sky,

      Is cast before you move,

      And all your deeds and words,

      Each truth, each lie,

      Die in unjudging love.

      TO OTHERS THAN YOU

      Friend by enemy I call you out.

      You with a bad coin in your socket,

      You my friend there with a winning air

      Who palmed the lie on me when you looked

      Brassily at my shyest secret,

      Enticed with twinkling bits of the eye

      Till the sweet tooth of my love bit dry,

      Rasped at last, and I stumbled and sucked,

      Whom now I conjure to stand as thief

      In the memory worked by mirrors,

      With unforgettably smiling act,

      Quickness of hand in the velvet glove

      And my whole heart under your hammer,

      Were once such a creature, so gay and frank

      A desireless familiar

      I never thought to utter or think

      While you displaced a truth in the air,

      That though I loved them for their faults

      As much as for their good,

      My friends were enemies on stilts

      With their heads in a cunning cloud.

      LOVE IN THE ASYLUM

      A stranger has come

      To share my room in the house not right in the head,

      A girl mad as birds

      Bolting the night of the door with her arm her plume.

      Strait in the mazed bed

      She deludes the heaven-proof house with entering clouds

      Yet she deludes with walking the nightmarish room,

      At large as the dead,

      Or rides the imagined oceans of the male wards.

      She has come possessed

      Who admits the delusive light through the bouncing wall,

      Possessed by the skies

      She sleeps in the narrow trough yet she walks the dust

      Yet raves at her will

      On the madhouse boards worn thin by my walking tears.

      And taken by light in her arms at long and dear last

      I may without fail

      Suffer the first vision that set fire to the stars.

      UNLUCKILY FOR A DEATH

      Unluckily for a death

      Waiting with phoenix under

      The pyre yet to be lighted of my sins and days,

      And for the woman in shades

      Saint carved and sensual among the scudding

      Dead and gone, dedicate forever to my self

      Though the brawl of the kiss has not occurred,

      On the clay cold mouth, on the fire

      Branded forehead, that could bind

      Her constant, nor the winds of love broken wide

      To the wind the choir and cloister

      Of the wintry nunnery of the order of lust

      Beneath my life, that sighs for the seducer’s coming

      In the sun strokes of summer,

      Loving on this sea banged guilt My holy lucky body

      Under the cloud against love is caught and held and kissed

      In the mill of the midst

      Of the descending day, the dark our folly,

      Cut to the still star in the order of the quick

      But blessed by such heroic hosts in your every

      Inch and glance that the wound

      Is certain god, and the ceremony of souls

      Is celebrated there, and communion between suns.

      Never shall my self chant

      About the saint in shades while the endless breviary

      Turns of your prayed flesh, nor shall I shoo the bird below me:

      The death biding two lie lonely.

      I see the tigron in tears In the androgynous dark,

      His striped and noon maned tribe striding to holocaust,

      The she mules bear their minotaurs,

      The duck-billed platypus broody in a milk of birds.

      I see the wanting nun saint carved in a garb

      Of shades, symbol of desire beyond my hours

      And guilts, great crotch and giant

      Continence. I see the unfired phoenix, herald

      And heaven crier, arrow now of aspiring

      And the renouncing of islands.

      All love but for the full assemblage in flower

      Of the living flesh is monstrous or immortal,

      And the grave its daughters.

      Love, my fate got luckily,

      Teaches with no telling

      That the phoenix’ bid for heaven and the desire after

      Death in the carved nunnery

    &nb
    sp; Both shall fail if I bow not to your blessing

      Nor walk in the cool of your mortal garden

      With immortality at my side like Christ the sky.

      This I know from the native

      Tongue of your translating eyes. The young stars told me,

      Hurling into beginning like Christ the child.

      Lucklessly she must lie patient

      And the vaulting bird be still. O my true love, hold me.

      In your every inch and glance is the globe of genesis spun,

      And the living earth your sons.

      THE HUNCHBACK IN THE PARK

      The hunchback in the park

      A solitary mister

      Propped between trees and water

      From the opening of the garden lock

      That lets the trees and water enter

      Until the Sunday sombre bell at dark

      Eating bread from a newspaper

      Drinking water from the chained cup

      That the children filled with gravel

      In the fountain basin where I sailed my ship

      Slept at night in a dog kennel

      But nobody chained him up.

      Like the park birds he came early

      Like the water he sat down

      And Mister they called Hey mister

      The truant boys from the town

      Running when he had heard them clearly

      On out of sound

      Past lake and rockery

      Laughing when he shook his paper

      Hunchbacked in mockery

      Through the loud zoo of the willow groves

      Dodging the park keeper

      With his stick that picked up leaves.

      And the old dog sleeper

      Alone between nurses and swans

      While the boys among willows

      Made the tigers jump out of their eyes

      To roar on the rockery stones

      And the groves were blue with sailors

      Made all day until bell time

      A woman figure without fault

      Straight as a young elm

      Straight and tall from his crooked bones

      That she might stand in the night

      After the locks and chains

      All night in the unmade park

      After the railings and shrubberies

      The birds the grass the trees the lake

      And the wild boys innocent as strawberries

      Had followed the hunchback

      To his kennel in the dark.

      INTO HER LYING DOWN HEAD

      I

      Into her lying down head

      His enemies entered bed,

      Under the encumbered eyelid,

      Through the rippled drum of the hair-buried ear;

      And Noah’s rekindled now unkind dove

      Flew man-bearing there.

      Last night in a raping wave

      Whales unrefined from the green grave

      In fountains of origin gave up their love,

      Along her innocence glided

      Juan aflame and savagely young King Lear,

      Queen Catherine howling bare

      And Samson drowned in his hair,

      The colossal intimacies of silent

      Once seen strangers or shades on a stair;

      There the dark blade and wanton sighing her down

      To a haycock couch and the scythes of his arms

      Rode and whistled a hundred times

      Before the crowing morning climbed;

      Man was the burning England she was sleep-walking,

      and the enamouring island

      Made her limbs blind by luminous charms,

      Sleep to a newborn sleep in a swaddling loin-leaf

      stroked and sang

      And his runaway beloved childlike laid in

      the acorned sand.

      II

      There where a numberless tongue

      Wound their room with a male moan,

      His faith around her flew undone

      And darkness hung the walls with baskets of snakes,

      A furnace-nostrilled column-membered

      Super-or-near man

      Resembling to her dulled sense

      The thief of adolescence,

      Early imaginary half remembered

      Oceanic lover alone

      Jealousy cannot forget for all her sakes,

      Made his bad bed in her good

      Night, and enjoyed as he would.

      Crying, white gowned, from the middle moonlit stages

      Out to the tiered and hearing tide,

      Close and far she announced the theft of the heart

      In the taken body at many ages,

      Trespasser and broken bride

      Celebrating at her side

      All blood-signed assailings and vanished marriages in

      which he had no lovely part

      Nor could share, for his pride, to the least

      Mutter and foul wingbeat of the solemnizing nightpriest

      Her holy unholy hours with the always anonymous beast.

      III

      Two sand grains together in bed,

      Head to heaven-circling head,

      Singly lie with the whole wide shore,

      The covering sea their nightfall with no names;

      And out of every domed and soil-based shell

      One voice in chains declaims

      The female, deadly, and male

      Libidinous betrayal,

      Golden dissolving under the water veil.

      A she bird sleeping brittle by

      Her lover’s wings that fold tomorrow’s flight,

      Within the nested treefork

      Sings to the treading hawk

      Carrion, paradise, chirrup my bright yolk.

      A blade of grass longs with the meadow,

      A stone lies lost and locked in the lark-high hill.

      Open as to the air to the naked shadow

      O she lies alone and still,

      Innocent between two wars,

      With the incestuous secret brother in the seconds

      to perpetuate the stars,

      A man torn up mourns in the sole night.

      And the second comers, the severers, the enemies

      from the deep

      Forgotten dark, rest their pulse and bury their

      dead in her faithless sleep.

      DO NOT GO GENTLE INTO THAT GOOD NIGHT

      Do not go gentle into that good night,

      Old age should burn and rave at close of day;

      Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

      Though wise men at their end know dark is right,

      Because their words had forked no lightning they

      Do not go gentle into that good night.

      Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright

      Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,

      Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

      Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,

      And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,

      Do not go gentle into that good night.

      Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight

      Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,

      Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

      And you, my father, there on the sad height,

      Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.

      Do not go gentle into that good night.

      Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

      DEATHS AND ENTRANCES

      On almost the incendiary eve

      Of several near deaths,

      When one at the great least of your best loved

      And always known must leave

      Lions and fires of his flying breath,

      Of your immortal friends

      Who’d raise the organs of the counted dust

      To shoot and sing your praise,

      One who called deepest down shall hold his peace

      That cannot sink or cease

      Endlessly to his wound

      In m
    any married London’s estranging grief.

      On almost the incendiary eve

      When at your lips and keys,

      Locking, unlocking, the murdered strangers weave,

      One who is most unknown,

      Your polestar neighbour, sun of another street,

      Will dive up to his tears.

      He’ll bathe his raining blood in the male sea

      Who strode for your own dead

      And wind his globe out of your water thread

      And load the throats of shells

      With every cry since light

      Flashed first across his thunderclapping eyes.

      On almost the incendiary eve

      Of deaths and entrances,

      When near and strange wounded on London’s waves

      Have sought your single grave,

      One enemy, of many, who knows well

      Your heart is luminous

      In the watched dark, quivering through locks and caves,

      Will pull the thunderbolts

      To shut the sun, plunge, mount your darkened keys

      And sear just riders back,

      Until that one loved least

      Looms the last Samson of your zodiac.

      A WINTER’S TALE

      It is a winter’s tale

      That the snow blind twilight ferries over the lakes

      And floating fields from the farm in the cup of the vales,

      Gliding windless through the hand folded flakes,

      The pale breath of cattle at the stealthy sail,

      And the stars falling cold,

      And the smell of hay in the snow, and the far owl

      Warning among the folds, and the frozen hold

      Flocked with the sheep white smoke of the farm house cowl

      In the river wended vales where the tale was told.

      Once when the world turned old

      On a star of faith pure as the drifting bread,

      As the food and flames of the snow, a man unrolled

      The scrolls of fire that burned in his heart and head,

      Torn and alone in a farm house in a fold

      Of fields. And burning then

      In his firelit island ringed by the winged snow

      And the dung hills white as wool and the hen

      Roosts sleeping chill till the flame of the cock crow

      Combs through the mantled yards and the morning men

      Stumble out with their spades,

      The cattle stirring, the mousing cat stepping shy,

      The puffed birds hopping and hunting, the milk maids

      Gentle in their clogs over the fallen sky,

      And all the woken farm at its white trades,

      He knelt, he wept, he prayed,

      By the spit and the black pot in the log bright light

     


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