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    The Collected Poems of Dylan Thomas

    Page 9
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      And the cup and the cut bread in the dancing shade,

      In the muffled house, in the quick of night,

      At the point of love, forsaken and afraid.

      He knelt on the cold stones,

      He wept from the crest of grief, he prayed to the veiled sky

      May his hunger go howling on bare white bones

      Past the statues of the stables and the sky roofed sties

      And the duck pond glass and the blinding byres alone

      Into the home of prayers

      And fires where he should prowl down the cloud

      Of his snow blind love and rush in the white lairs.

      His naked need struck him howling and bowed

      Though no sound flowed down the hand folded air

      But only the wind strung

      Hunger of birds in the fields of the bread of water, tossed

      In high corn and the harvest melting on their tongues.

      And his nameless need bound him burning and lost

      When cold as snow he should run the wended vales among

      The rivers mouthed in night,

      And drown in the drifts of his need, and lie curled caught

      In the always desiring centre of the white

      Inhuman cradle and the bride bed forever sought

      By the believer lost and the hurled outcast of light.

      Deliver him, he cried,

      By losing him all in love, and cast his need

      Alone and naked in the engulfing bride,

      Never to flourish in the fields of the white seed

      Or flower under the time dying flesh astride.

      Listen. The minstrels sing

      In the departed villages. The nightingale,

      Dust in the buried wood, flies on the grains of her wings

      And spells on the winds of the dead his winter’s tale.

      The voice of the dust of water from the withered spring

      Is telling. The wizened

      Stream with bells and baying water bounds. The dew rings

      On the gristed leaves and the long gone glistening

      Parish of snow. The carved mouths in the rock are wind swept strings.

      Time sings through the intricately dead snow drop. Listen.

      It was a hand or sound

      In the long ago land that glided the dark door wide

      And there outside on the bread of the ground

      A she bird rose and rayed like a burning bride.

      A she bird dawned, and her breast with snow and scarlet downed.

      Look. And the dancers move

      On the departed, snow bushed green, wanton in moon light

      As a dust of pigeons. Exulting, the grave hooved

      Horses, centaur dead, turn and tread the drenched white

      Paddocks in the farms of birds. The dead oak walks for love.

      The carved limbs in the rock

      Leap, as to trumpets. Calligraphy of the old Leaves is dancing.

      Lines of age on the stones weave in a flock.

      And the harp shaped voice of the water’s dust plucks in a fold

      Of fields. For love, the long ago she bird rises. Look.

      And the wild wings were raised

      Above her folded head, and the soft feathered voice

      Was flying through the house as though the she bird praised

      And all the elements of the slow fall rejoiced

      That a man knelt alone in the cup of the vales,

      In the mantle and calm,

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

      And the sky of birds in the plumed voice charmed

      Him up and he ran like a wind after the kindling flight

      Past the blind barns and byres of the windless farm.

      In the poles of the year

      When black birds died like priests in the cloaked hedge row

      And over the cloth of counties the far hills rode near,

      Under the one leaved trees ran a scarecrow of snow

      And fast through the drifts of the thickets antlered like deer,

      Rags and prayers down the knee-

      Deep hillocks and loud on the numbed lakes,

      All night lost and long wading in the wake of the she-

      Bird through the times and lands and tribes of the slow flakes.

      Listen and look where she sails the goose plucked sea,

      The sky, the bird, the bride,

      The cloud, the need, the planted stars, the joy beyond

      The fields of seed and the time dying flesh astride,

      The heavens, the heaven, the grave, the burning font.

      In the far ago land the door of his death glided wide,

      And the bird descended.

      On a bread white hill over the cupped farm

      And the lakes and floating fields and the river wended

      Vales where he prayed to come to the last harm

      And the home of prayers and fires, the tale ended.

      The dancing perishes

      On the white, no longer growing green, and, minstrel dead,

      The singing breaks in the snow shoed villages of wishes

      That once cut the figures of birds on the deep bread

      And over the glazed lakes skated the shapes of fishes

      Flying. The rite is shorn

      Of nightingale and centaur dead horse. The springs wither

      Back. Lines of age sleep on the stones till trumpeting dawn.

      Exultation lies down. Time buries the spring weather

      That belled and bounded with the fossil and the dew reborn.

      For the bird lay bedded

      In a choir of wings, as though she slept or died,

      And the wings glided wide and he was hymned and wedded,

      And through the thighs of the engulfing bride,

      The woman breasted and the heaven headed

      Bird, he was brought low,

      Burning in the bride bed of love, in the whirl-

      Pool at the wanting centre, in the folds

      Of paradise, in the spun bud of the world.

      And she rose with him flowering in her melting snow.

      ON A WEDDING ANNIVERSARY

      The sky is torn across

      This ragged anniversary of two

      Who moved for three years in tune

      Down the long walks of their vows.

      Now their love lies a loss

      And Love and his patients roar on a chain;

      From every true or crater

      Carrying cloud, Death strikes their house.

      Too late in the wrong rain

      They come together whom their love parted:

      The windows pour into their heart

      And the doors burn in their brain.

      THERE WAS A SAVIOUR

      There was a saviour

      Rarer than radium,

      Commoner than water, crueller than truth;

      Children kept from the sun

      Assembled at his tongue

      To hear the golden note turn in a groove,

      Prisoners of wishes locked their eyes

      In the jails and studies of his keyless smiles.

      The voice of children says

      From a lost wilderness

      There was calm to be done in his safe unrest,

      When hindering man hurt

      Man, animal, or bird

      We hid our fears in that murdering breath,

      Silence, silence to do, when earth grew loud,

      In lairs and asylums of the tremendous shout.

      There was glory to hear

      In the churches of his tears,

      Under his downy arm you sighed as he struck,

      O you who could not cry

      On to the ground when a man died

      Put a tear for joy in the unearthly flood

      And laid your cheek against a cloud-formed shell:

      Now in the dark there is only yourself and myself.

      Two proud, blacked brothers cry,

      Winter-locked side by side,

      To this inhospita
    ble hollow year,

      O we who could not stir

      One lean sigh when we heard

      Greed on man beating near and fire neighbour

      But wailed and nested in the sky-blue wall

      Now break a giant tear for the little known fall,

      For the drooping of homes

      That did not nurse our bones,

      Brave deaths of only ones but never found,

      Now see, alone in us,

      Our own true strangers’ dust

      Ride through the doors of our unentered house.

      Exiled in us we arouse the soft,

      Unclenched, armless, silk and rough love that breaks all rocks.

      ON THE MARRIAGE OF A VIRGIN

      Waking alone in a multitude of loves when morning’s light

      Surprised in the opening of her nightlong eyes

      His golden yesterday asleep upon the iris

      And this day’s sun leapt up the sky out of her thighs

      Was miraculous virginity old as loaves and fishes,

      Though the moment of a miracle is unending lightning

      And the shipyards of Galilee’s footprints hide a navy of doves.

      No longer will the vibrations of the sun desire on

      Her deepsea pillow where once she married alone,

      Her heart all ears and eyes, lips catching the avalanche

      Of the golden ghost who ringed with his streams her mercury bone,

      Who under the lids of her windows hoisted his golden luggage,

      For a man sleeps where fire leapt down and she learns through his arm

      That other sun, the jealous coursing of the unrivalled blood.

      IN MY CRAFT OR SULLEN ART

      In my craft or sullen art

      Exercised in the still night

      When only the moon rages

      And the lovers lie abed

      With all their griefs in their arms,

      I labour by singing light

      Not for ambition or bread

      Or the strut and trade of charms

      On the ivory stages

      But for the common wages

      Of their most secret heart.

      Not for the proud man apart

      From the raging moon I write

      On these spindrift pages

      Nor for the towering dead

      With their nightingales and psalms

      But for the lovers, their arms

      Round the griefs of the ages,

      Who pay no praise or wages

      Nor heed my craft or art.

      CEREMONY AFTER A FIRE RAID

      I

      Myselves

      The grievers

      Grieve

      Among the street burned to tireless death

      A child of a few hours

      With its kneading mouth

      Charred on the black breast of the grave

      The mother dug, and its arms full of fires.

      Begin

      With singing

      Sing

      Darkness kindled back into beginning

      When the caught tongue nodded blind,

      A star was broken

      Into the centuries of the child

      Myselves grieve now, and miracles cannot atone.

      Forgive

      Us forgive

      Give

      Us your death that myselves the believers

      May hold it in a great flood

      Till the blood shall spurt,

      And the dust shall sing like a bird

      As the grains blow, as your death grows, through our heart.

      Crying

      Your dying

      Cry,

      Child beyond cockcrow, by the fire-dwarfed

      Street we chant the flying sea

      In the body bereft.

      Love is the last light spoken. Oh

      Seed of sons in the loin of the black husk left.

      II

      I know not whether

      Adam or Eve, the adorned holy bullock

      Or the white ewe lamb

      Or the chosen virgin

      Laid in her snow

      On the altar of London,

      Was the first to die

      In the cinder of the little skull,

      O bride and bride groom

      O Adam and Eve together

      Lying in the lull

      Under the sad breast of the head stone

      White as the skeleton

      Of the garden of Eden.

      I know the legend

      Of Adam and Eve is never for a second

      Silent in my service

      Over the dead infants Over the one

      Child who was priest and servants,

      Word, singers, and tongue

      In the cinder of the little skull,

      Who was the serpent’s

      Night fall and the fruit like a sun,

      Man and woman undone,

      Beginning crumbled back to darkness

      Bare as the nurseries

      Of the garden of wilderness.

      III

      Into the organpipes and steeples

      Of the luminous cathedrals,

      Into the weathercocks’ molten mouths

      Rippling in twelve-winded circles,

      Into the dead clock burning the hour

      Over the urn of Sabbaths

      Over the whirling ditch of daybreak

      Over the sun’s hovel and the slum of fire

      And the golden pavements laid in requiems,

      Into the bread in a wheatfield of flames,

      Into the wine burning like brandy,

      The masses of the sea

      The masses of the sea under

      The masses of the infant-bearing sea

      Erupt, fountain, and enter to utter for ever

      Glory glory glory

      The sundering ultimate kingdom of genesis’ thunder.

      ONCE BELOW A TIME

      I

      Once below a time,

      When my pinned-around-the-spirit

      Cut-to-measure flesh bit,

      Suit for a serial sum

      On the first of each hardship,

      My paid-for slaved-for own too late

      In love torn breeches and blistered jacket

      On the snapping rims of the ashpit,

      In grottoes I worked with birds,

      Spiked with a mastiff collar,

      Tasselled in cellar and snipping shop

      Or decked on a cloud swallower,

      Then swift from a bursting sea with bottlecork boats

      And out-of-perspective sailors,

      In common clay clothes disguised as scales,

      As a he-god’s paddling water skirts,

      I astounded the sitting tailors,

      I set back the clock faced tailors,

      Then, bushily swanked in bear wig and tails,

      Hopping hot leaved and feathered

      From the kangaroo foot of the earth,

      From the chill, silent centre

      Trailing the frost bitten cloth,

      Up through the lubber crust of Wales

      I rocketed to astonish

      The flashing needle rock of squatters,

      The criers of Shabby and Shorten,

      The famous stitch droppers.

      II

      My silly suit, hardly yet suffered for,

      Around some coffin carrying

      Birdman or told ghost I hung.

      And the owl hood, the heel hider,

      Claw fold and hole for the rotten

      Head, deceived, I believed, my maker,

      The cloud perched tailors’ master with nerves for cotton.

      On the old seas from stories, thrashing my wings,

      Combing with antlers, Columbus on fire,

      I was pierced by the idol tailor’s eyes,

      Glared through shark mask and navigating head,

      Cold Nansen’s beak on a boat full of gongs,

      To the boy of common thread,

      The bright pretender, the ridiculous sea dandy

      With dry flesh and earth for adorning and bed.


      It was sweet to drown in the readymade handy water

      With my cherry capped dangler green as seaweed

      Summoning a child’s voice from a webfoot stone,

      Never never oh never to regret the bugle I wore

      On my cleaving arm as I blasted in a wave.

      Now shown and mostly bare I would lie down,

      Lie down, lie down and live

      As quiet as a bone.

      WHEN I WOKE

      When I woke, the town spoke.

      Birds and clocks and cross bells

      Dinned aside the coiling crowd,

      The reptile profligates in a flame,

      Spoilers and pokers of sleep,

      The next-door sea dispelled

      Frogs and satans and woman-luck,

      While a man outside with a billhook,

      Up to his head in his blood,

      Cutting the morning off,

      The warm-veined double of Time

      And his scarving beard from a book,

      Slashed down the last snake as though

      It were a wand or subtle bough,

      Its tongue peeled in the wrap of a leaf.

      Every morning I make,

      God in bed, good and bad,

      After a water-face walk,

      The death-stagged scatter-breath

      Mammoth and sparrowfall

      Everybody’s earth.

      Where birds ride like leaves and boats like ducks

      I heard, this morning, waking,

      Crossly out of the town noises

      A voice in the erected air,

      No prophet-progeny of mine,

      Cry my sea town was breaking.

      No Time, spoke the clocks, no God, rang the bells,

      I drew the white sheet over the islands

      And the coins on my eyelids sang like shells.

      AMONG THOSE KILLED IN THE DAWN RAID WAS A MAN AGED A HUNDRED

      When the morning was waking over the war

      He put on his clothes and stepped out and he died,

      The locks yawned loose and a blast blew them wide,

      He dropped where he loved on the burst pavement stone

      And the funeral grains of the slaughtered floor.

      Tell his street on its back he stopped a sun

      And the craters of his eyes grew springshoots and fire

      When all the keys shot from the locks, and rang.

      Dig no more for the chains of his grey-haired heart.

      The heavenly ambulance drawn by a wound

      Assembling waits for the spade’s ring on the cage.

      O keep his bones away from that common cart,

      The morning is flying on the wings of his age

      And a hundred storks perch on the sun’s right hand.

     


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