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    Collected Poems 1931-74


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      LAWRENCE DURRELL

      Collected Poems 1931–1974

      Contents

      Title Page

      Author’s Preface

      To the Reader

      The Gift

      Pioneer

      Inconstancy

      Happy Vagabond

      Sonnet Astray

      The Beginning

      Highwayman

      Crisis

      Dark Grecian

      Echoes: I

      Futility

      Largesse

      Echoes: II

      Candle-Light

      Christ A Modern

      A Dedication

      Finis

      Treasure

      Discovery of Love

      Plea

      Lost

      Question

      Love’s Inability

      Cueillez dès Aujourd’huy les Roses de la Vie

      Return

      Je Deviens Immortel dans tes Bras

      Retreat

      Ballade of Slow Decay

      Tulliola

      Lyric

      Wheat-Field

      Faces

      Love Poems

      Mass for the Old Year

      The Death of General Uncebunke: A Biography in Little

      Fourteen Carols

      Five Soliloquies upon the Tomb of Uncebunke

      Egyptian Poem

      Carol on Corfu

      Lines to Music

      Themes Heraldic

      Logos

      The Hanged Man

      Father Nicholas His Death: Corfu

      Adam

      Paris Journal

      The Poet

      The Egg

      A Small Scripture

      ‘A Soliloquy of Hamlet’

      The Sermon

      The Prayer-Wheel

      Green Man

      In Crisis

      At Corinth

      Nemea

      In Arcadia

      A Noctuary in Athens

      Daphnis and Chloe

      Fangbrand: A Biography

      At Epidaurus

      Letter to Seferis the Greek

      For a Nursery Mirror

      To Ping-Kû, Asleep

      To Argos

      ‘Je est un Autre’

      Conon in Exile

      On First Looking into Loeb’s Horace

      On Ithaca Standing

      Exile in Athens

      A Ballad of the Good Lord Nelson

      Coptic Poem

      Mythology

      Matapan

      Echo

      This Unimportant Morning

      Byron

      La Rochefoucauld

      Pearls

      Heloise and Abelard

      Conon in Alexandria

      Mareotis

      Conon the Critic on the Six Landscape Painters of Greece

      Water Music

      Delos

      The Pilot

      The Parthenon

      In Europe

      Pressmarked Urgent

      Two Poems in Basic English

      Ships. Islands. Trees

      Near El Alamein

      Levant

      Greek Church: Alexandria

      Notebook

      Eight Aspects of Melissa

      By the Lake

      Cairo

      The Adepts

      The Encounter

      Petron, the Desert Father

      The Rising Sun

      Visitations

      A Prospect of Children

      Possible Worlds

      Alexandria

      Poggio

      Blind Homer

      Fabre

      Cities, Plains and People

      Rodini

      In the Garden: Villa Cleobolus

      Eternal Contemporaries: Six Portraits

      Manoli of Cos

      Mark of Patmos

      Basil the Hermit

      Dmitri of Carpathos

      Panagiotis of Lindos

      A Rhodian Captain

      Elegy on the Closing of the French Brothels

      Pomona de Maillol

      Anniversary

      The Critics

      Phileremo

      Song for Zarathustra

      Politics

      The Daily Mirror

      Song

      Penelope

      Swans

      Bere Regis

      On Seeming to Presume

      Self to Not-Self

      Patmos

      The Lost Cities

      Funchal

      High Sierra

      Green Coconuts: Rio

      Christ in Brazil

      The Anecdotes

      In Cairo

      In Cairo

      At Rhodes

      At Rhodes

      In Athens

      At Alexandria

      At Alexandria

      In Patmos

      In Patmos

      In Britain

      In Britain

      In Rhodes

      In Paris

      In Beirut

      In Rhodes

      In Rio

      A Water-Colour of Venice

      Deus Loci

      Epitaph

      Education of a Cloud

      The Sirens

      Chanel

      Cradle Song

      Clouds of Glory

      River Water

      Sarajevo

      A Bowl of Roses

      Lesbos

      Letters in Darkness

      On Mirrors

      Orpheus

      Mneiae

      Niki

      The Dying Fall

      Poem

      At Strati’s

      The Tree of Idleness

      Bitter Lemons

      Near Kyrenia

      Episode

      The Meeting

      John Donne

      Ballad of Psychoanalysis: Extracts from a Case-Book

      At the Long Bar

      Style

      Thasos

      A Portrait of Theodora

      Asphodels: Chalcidice

      Freedom

      Near Paphos

      The Octagon Room

      Eva Braun’s Dream

      The Cottager

      Night Express

      Mythology

      Cavafy

      Ballad of Kretschmer’s Types

      Ballad of the Oedipus Complex

      Aphrodite

      Eleusis

      A Persian Lady

      Pursewarden’s Incorrigibilia

      Frankie and Johnny: New Style

      Byzance

      Ode to a Lukewarm Eyebrow

      Olives

      Scaffoldings: Plaka

      Stone Honey

      Congenies

      Piccadilly

      Strip-Tease

      In the Margin

      Poemandres

      Portfolio

      Prix Blondel

      Summer

      Delphi

      Salamis

      Troy

      Io

      One Grey Greek Stone

      Leeches

      Geishas

      The Ikons

      Apteros

      Keepsake

      Cape Drasti

      North West

      The Initiation

      Acropolis

      Persuasions

      Moonlight

      Blood-Count

      Kasyapa

      Vidourle

      Paullus to Cornelia

      Press Interview

      Confederate

      Owed to America

      The Outer Limits

      Solange

      The Reckoning

      Nobody

      Rain, Rain, Go to Spain

      Aphros Meaning Spume

      A Winter of Vampires

      Faustus

      Pistol Weather

      Lake Music

      Stoic

      ?

      Sixties

      Avis

      One Place


      Revenants

      The Land

      Joss

      Avignon

      Incognito

      Swimmers

      Blue

      Mistral

      Envoi

      Last Heard Of

      Seferis

      Vega

      Poem for Katharine Falley Bennett’s Birthday

      Vaumort

      Spring Song

      Hey, Mister, There’s a Bulge in Your Computer

      On the Suchness of the Old Boy

      The Ophite

      Alphabeta

      A Farewell

      Mandrake Root

      Apesong

      Want to Live Don’t You?

      The Grey Penitents

      Dublin

      Sages

      By the Sea

      Cicada

      The Muses

      Certain Landfalls

      A Patch of Dust

      Postmark

      In Deep Grass

      Index of First Lines

      About the Author

      Copyright

      Preface

      An invitation to make this edition of my Collected Poems (the third) definitive and comprehensive could not have been accepted had chance not put in my way a Canadian scholar, Dr James Brigham, who, in the pursuit of his own studies, had collected and indexed the whole of my published work. He was kind enough to let me profit from his toil, and the editing and arranging of this edition is entirely his work, which has been aided and shaped by the bibliography of Alan G. Thomas. My warm thanks go to both men for this exemplary edition which I would not have been able to assemble unaided.

      LAWRENCE DURRELL

      1980

      To the Reader

      This third collection of Lawrence Durrell’s poems makes generally available for the first time all of the poems published between 1931 and 1974. The earliest items are now all quite scarce: Quaint Fragment: Poems Written between the Ages of Sixteen and Nineteen (1931); Ten Poems (1932); Ballade of Slow Decay (Christmas, 1932); Transition: Poems (1934); Mass for the Old Year (1935). Durrell’s first real volume of verse, in terms of availability to the public, was A Private Country (1943), and it was followed by Cities, Plains and People (1946) and On Seeming to Presume (1948). Deus Loci (1950) and Private Drafts (1955) marked a brief return to private, limited editions, but Durrell has remained a truly public poet since The Tree of Idleness (also 1955). That volume was followed by Selected Poems (1956); the first Collected Poems (1960); Selected Poems, 1935–1963 (1964); The Ikons and Other Poems (1966); the second Collected Poems (1968); Vega and Other Poems (1973), which included the poems published in The Red Limbo Lingo (1971); and Selected Poems (1977). All the poems published in these volumes are collected here, as are those poems which were published in little magazines but which were never collected. However, poems published as integral parts of plays or novels are not included, nor are poems which exist only in manuscript form.

      My two goals in compiling this edition have been to give the reader a sense of the publishing history of Durrell’s poems, and to retain the sense of intimacy which the arrangement of poems in earlier editions has given.

      The poems have been arranged chronologically by year of first publication. Two dates are given beneath each poem: the date on the left is the year in which the poem was first gathered by its author as part of a volume of verse; the italicized date on the right is the year of first publication. Poems which were originally dated by the poet retain those dates, in parentheses, beneath their titles.

      Over the years, and for various reasons, many of the original dedications to the poems had been removed; they have been restored in this edition. Similarly, original author’s or prefatory notes which had been either pared down or completely excised have here been reinstated. Finally, epigrams from Georges Blin and Mila Repa which appeared in first editions as ‘keys to a mood’ but have not appeared in collected editions have been slipped into this edition in their original chronological settings.

      JAMES A. BRIGHAM

      Okanagan College

      1980

      THE GIFT

      Now that I have given all that I could bring

      Slit the wide, silken tassel of the purse,

      Scattered its myriad bounties to the Spring.

      To the rich Autumn leaves:

      The crumbled dust

      Of ancient adorations, murmurings,

      And the dull story of some faded lust,

      Will you remember it and, mother-wise

      Thank me in these chill after-days

      When I am empty-handed … with your eyes?

      1980/1931

      PIONEER

      I built a house, far in a wilderness,

      Against the arid ramparts of a sky,

      Proof against occult art or wizardry:

      Against my distant wanderings, comradeless.

      I planted the straight, cool pine-trees all around,

      And brimmed the garden with wild peony;

      Here I kept silence, lived only to see

      The magic in the trees, the friendly ground

      Turn and put forth its tendrils of new life

      Into the glowing grass: and here I dwelt,

      No eloquent shadows that could break or melt

      My great content;

      Only a living strife

      Calling me back from this core of desolation,

      To seek an ultimate twilight in a life.

      1980/1931

      INCONSTANCY

      Child, in the first few hours I lived with you,

      Time beat the generous pulses of desire,

      And churned the embers of a faded light to livid fever heat;

      The fleeting moments laughed in mockery;

      Fled with the light abruptness of a dream …

      Time was asleep … Night and the stars remained

      The bitter emptiness of nothing gained,

      The queer half-witted stagnancy of Love

      Passed like a covert whisper in the night.

      And yet, they say, beneath some other skies,

      Grey in the dusk there’ll be another one

      Another with perhaps diviner eyes.

      1980/1931

      HAPPY VAGABOND

      (Amsterdam 1930)

      I was a vagabond; sunset and moon

      Found me a place in their hearts.

      Gladly I saw

      The still, white summits of the friendly hills,

      And snatched a wraith of sadness from the core

      Of the deep sea, the unresisting earth:

      Sang to the moon, and wove a melody

      Deep in the strident archways of the sky;

      Or felt the benediction of rebirth

      That stirred strange anguish in this vagrant heart …

      So there was silence in the wind that followed after,

      Dim with a memory I’d left behind

      Chilled into terror by the phantom of your laughter.

      1980/1931

      SONNET ASTRAY

      We had a heritage that we have lost,

      Ours was the whiteness and the godliness

      Wings of the twilight; child-like we caress

      The tawdry fragments of old dreams, embossed

      With all the garishness of wandering minds,

      Crazed and distraught; palsied with senile age.

      The wisdom of a fool that seeks and finds

      An emptiness, a gaunt penultimate stage

      Before perfection! Reason fades and dies

      Beneath the burden of such blasphemies;

      Life is a loneliness, and heritage

      A whispered mockery; yet first to go,

      Killed by the fitful ravings of a sage

      Was youth; youth has been dead a painted age ago …

      Sometimes the gross pendulum of time

      Is swung back an aeon;

      And I,

      Bewilderingly wonder at my great foolishness

      To leave you forever alone that night by a star swept sea,

      With the laughter of the dark surf
    in your eyes …

      Godless, and yet so very much a God.

      1980/1931

      THE BEGINNING

      Oh! to blunder onto the glory of some white, majestic headland,

      And to feel the clean wisdom of the curving sea,

      And the dear mute calling of the wind

      On the masked heels of the twilight….

      Greying away to sundown, winding into the west;

      And oh! heart of my heart to find

      Dreams so oft forgotten, few fulfilled.

      1980/1931

      HIGHWAYMAN

      The road is a sinister pathway paved with smoke,

      A faint, white tremor; in the encircling trees

      Grow the little whispers, oak to friendly oak,

      Sentinels of the road.

      Darker than these

      Full in the shadow of the leaning elm

      A restive horse pads on the level grass,

      And counts the seconds; dark, immobile sits

      The masked rider, gleaming oblique slits

      For eyes, watching the timid minutes pass

      On stealthy feet, hurrying the approach

      Of time;

      Far out upon the curving road

      Glitters, an unsuspecting prey, the Midnight Coach.…

      1980/1931

      CRISIS

      How can we find the substance of the lie;

      Trace the huge source of deadlock, and complain

      Of wealth denied, when we who paid the cost

      Thwart our forbidden ends of destiny,

      And mock our own wild laughter?

      We have lost

      In the lithe whips of the soft, blinding rain,

      More than a century of mingled hates …

      More than these years of recompense forget:

      Turbulence at a sleeping city’s gates:

      The pathos of a victim still, beset

      By a reluctant Hector, finding light

      In the huge heart-break of its shaken tears,

      A width … a tenderness … some ultimate height

      To stem the vanguard of to-day with years.

      1980/1931

      DARK GRECIAN

      Down the wide shadow-streets of the city,

      By the white marble steps

      Where the quiet, soft-robed people

      Crowd to the glamour of the music,

      Deep between the pallid shadows of the houses,

      And the white fantasy of the Moonlight

      Among the columns;

      Through the glazed signature of the mists

      Across the great Dome,

     


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