Baffled, aghast with hate, mouse-poor,
   He glares and clatters the brass knob.
   Through his heart it slid sure:
   He bowed, he fell with never a sob.
   Again she stabbed, now sits secure,
   Praying (as she has always prayed)
   For great Victoria’s Majesty,
   Droning prayer for God’s aid
   To succour long dead Royalty,
   The Consort Prince, Queen Adelaide….
   She falls asleep, the clocks chime two;
   Old Becker sinks to unquiet rest.
   Loud and sad the cats mew.
   Lead weighs cruelly on his breast,
   His bones are tufted with mildew.
   Whipperginny
   (1923)
   WHIPPERGINNY
   (‘A card game, obsolete.’ – Standard Dictionary.)
   To cards we have recourse
   When Time with cruelty runs,
   To courtly Bridge for stress of love,
   To Nap for noise of guns.
   On fairy earth we tread,
   No present problems vex
   Where man’s four humours fade to suits,
   With red and black for sex.
   Where phantom gains accrue
   By tricks instead of cash,
   Where pasteboard federacies of Powers
   In battles-royal clash.
   Then read the antique word
   That hangs above this page
   As type of mirth-abstracted joy,
   Calm terror, noiseless rage,
   A realm of ideal thought,
   Obscured by veils of Time,
   Cipher remote enough to stand
   As namesake for my rhyme,
   A game to play apart
   When all but crushed with care;
   Let right and left, your jealous hands,
   The lists of love prepare.
   THE BEDPOST
   Sleepy Betsy from her pillow
   Sees the post and ball
   Of her sister’s wooden bedstead
   Shadowed on the wall.
   Now this grave young warrior standing
   With uncovered head
   Tells her stories of old battle
   As she lies in bed:
   How the Emperor and the Farmer,
   Fighting knee to knee,
   Broke their swords but whirled their scabbards
   Till they gained the sea.
   How the ruler of that shore
   Foully broke his oath,
   Gave them beds in his sea cave,
   Then stabbed them both.
   How the daughters of the Emperor,
   Diving boldly through,
   Caught and killed their father’s murderer
   Old Cro-bar-cru.
   How the Farmer’s sturdy sons
   Fought the Giant Gog,
   Threw him into Stony Cataract
   In the land of Og.
   Will and Abel were their names,
   Though they went by others:
   He could tell ten thousand stories
   Of these lusty brothers.
   How the Emperor’s elder daughter
   Fell in love with Will
   And went with him to the Court of Venus
   Over Hoo Hill;
   How Gog’s wife encountered Abel
   Whom she hated most,
   Stole away his arms and helmet,
   Turned him to a post.
   As a post he shall stay rooted
   For yet many years,
   Until a maiden shall release him
   With pitying tears.
   But Betsy likes the bloodier stories,
   Clang and clash of fight,
   And Abel wanes with the spent candle –
   ‘sweetheart, good-night!’
   A LOVER SINCE CHILDHOOD
   Tangled in thought am I,
   Stumble in speech do I?
   Do I blunder and blush for the reason why?
   Wander aloof do I,
   Lean over gates and sigh,
   Making friends with the bee and the butterfly?
   If thus and thus I do,
   Dazed by the thought of you,
   Walking my sorrowful way in the early dew,
   My heart cut through and through
   In this despair for you,
   Starved for a word or look will my hope renew;
   Give then a thought for me
   Walking so miserably,
   Wanting relief in the friendship of flower or tree;
   Do but remember, we
   Once could in love agree,
   Swallow your pride, let us be as we used to be.
   SONG OF CONTRARIETY
   Far away is close at hand,
   Close joined is far away,
   Love shall come at your command
   Yet will not stay.
   At summons of your dream-despair
   She might not disobey,
   But slid close down beside you there,
   And complaisant lay.
   Yet now her flesh and blood consent
   In the hours of day,
   Joy and passion both are spent,
   Twining clean away.
   Is the person empty air,
   Is the spectre clay,
   That love, lent substance by despair,
   Wanes and leaves you lonely there
   On the bridal day?
   LOVE IN BARRENNESS
   Below the ridge a raven flew
   And we heard the lost curlew
   Mourning out of sight below.
   Mountain tops were touched with snow;
   Even the long dividing plain
   Showed no wealth of sheep or grain,
   But fields of boulders lay like corn
   And raven’s croak was shepherd’s horn
   Where slow cloud-shadow strayed across
   A pasture of thin heath and moss.
   The North Wind rose: I saw him press
   With lusty force against your dress,
   Moulding your body’s inward grace
   And streaming off from your set face;
   So now no longer flesh and blood
   But poised in marble flight you stood.
   O wingless Victory, loved of men,
   Who could withstand your beauty then?
   SONG IN WINTER
   The broken spray left hanging
   Can hold his dead leaf longer
   Into your glum November
   Than this live twig tossed shivering
   By your East Wind anger.
   Unrepentant, hoping Spring,
   Flowery hoods of glory hoping,
   Carelessly I sing,
   With envy none for the broken spray
   When the Spring comes, fallen away.
   UNICORN AND THE WHITE DOE
   Unicorn with burning heart
   Breath of love has drawn
   On his desolate peak apart
   At rumour of dawn,
   Has trumpeted his pride
   These long years mute,
   Tossed his horn from side to side,
   Lunged with his foot.
   Like a storm of sand has run
   Breaking his own boundaries,
   Gone in hiding from the sun
   Under camphor trees.
   Straight was the course he took
   Across the plain, but here with briar
   And mire the tangled alleys crook,
   Baulking desire.
   A shoulder glistened white –
   The bough still shakes –
   A white doe darted out of sight
   Through the forest brakes.
   Tall and close the camphors grow
   The grass grows thick –
   Where you are I do not know,
   You fly so quick.
   Where have you fled from me?
   I pursue, you fade,
   I hunt, you hide from me
   In the chequered glade.
   Often from my hot lair
   I would watch you drink,
 &n
bsp; A mirage of tremulous air,
   At the pool’s brink.
   Vultures, rocking high in air
   By the western gate,
   Warned me with discordant cry
   You are even such as I:
   You have no mate.
   SONG: SULLEN MOODS
   Love, never count your labour lost
   Though I turn sullen or retired
   Even at your side; my thought is crossed
   With fancies by no evil fired.
   And when I answer you, some days,
   Vaguely and wildly, never fear
   That my love walks forbidden ways,
   Snapping the ties that hold it here.
   If I speak gruffly, this mood is
   Mere indignation at my own
   Shortcomings, plagues, uncertainties:
   I forget the gentler tone.
   You, now that you have come to be
   My one beginning, prime and end,
   I count at last as wholly me,
   Lover no longer nor yet friend.
   Help me to see you as before
   When overwhelmed and dead, almost,
   I stumbled on that secret door
   Which saves the live man from the ghost.
   Be once again the distant light,
   Promise of glory, not yet known
   In full perfection – wasted quite
   When on my imperfection thrown.
   ANGRY SAMSON
   Are they blind, the lords of Gaza
   In their strong towers,
   Who declare Samson pillow-smothered
   And stripped of his powers?
   O stolid Philistines,
   Stare now in amaze
   At my foxes running in your cornfields
   With their tails ablaze,
   At swung jaw-bone, at bees swarming
   In the stark lion’s hide,
   At these, the gates of well-walled Gaza
   A-clank to my stride.
   CHILDREN OF DARKNESS
   We spurred our parents to the kiss,
   Though doubtfully they shrank from this –
   Day had no courage to pursue
   What lusty dark alone might do:
   Then were we joined from their caress
   In heat of midnight, one from two.
   This night-seed knew no discontent:
   In certitude our changings went.
   Though there were veils about his face,
   With forethought, even in that pent place,
   Down toward the light his way we bent
   To kingdoms of more ample space.
   Is Day prime error, that regret
   For Darkness roars unstifled yet?
   That in this freedom, by faith won,
   Only acts of doubt are done?
   That unveiled eyes with tears are wet:
   We loathe to gaze upon the sun?
   RICHARD ROE AND JOHN DOE
   Richard Roe wished himself Solomon,
   Made cuckold, you should know, by one John Doe:
   Solomon’s neck was firm enough to bear
   Some score of antlers more than Roe could wear.
   Richard Roe wished himself Alexander,
   Being robbed of house and land by the same hand:
   Ten thousand acres or a principal town
   Would have cost Alexander scarce a frown.
   Richard Roe wished himself Job the prophet,
   Sunk past reclaim in stinking rags and shame –
   However ill Job’s plight, his own was worse:
   He knew no God to call on or to curse.
   He wished himself Job, Solomon, Alexander,
   For patience, wisdom, power to overthrow
   Misfortune; but with spirit so unmanned
   That most of all he wished himself John Doe.
   THE DIALECTICIANS
   I heard two poets
   Down by the sea,
   Discussing a burdensome
   Relativity.
   Thought has a bias,
   Direction a bend,
   Space its inhibitions,
   Time a dead end.
   Is whiteness white?
   O then, call it black:
   Farthest from the truth
   Is yet half-way back.
   Effect ordains cause,
   Head swallowing the tail;
   Does whale engulf sprat,
   Or sprat assume whale?
   Contentions weary,
   It giddies to think;
   Then swim, poet, swim!
   Or drink, poet, drink!
   THE LAND OF WHIPPERGINNY
   Come closer yet, my honeysuckle, my sweetheart Jinny:
   A low sun is gilding the bloom of the wood –
   Is it Heaven, or Hell, or the Land of Whipperginny
   That holds this fairy lustre, not understood?
   For stern proud psalms from the chapel on the moors
   Waver in the night wind, their firm rhythm broken,
   Lugubriously twisted to a howling of whores
   Or lent an airy glory too strange to be spoken.
   Soon the risen Moon will peer down with pity,
   Drawing us in secret by an ivory gate
   To the fruit-plats and fountains of her silver city
   Where lovers need not argue the tokens of fate.
   ‘THE GENERAL ELIOTT’
   He fell in victory’s fierce pursuit,
   Holed through and through with shot;
   A sabre sweep had hacked him deep
   ’Twixt neck and shoulder-knot.
   The potman cannot well recall,
   The ostler never knew,
   Whether that day was Malplaquet,
   The Boyne, or Waterloo.
   But there he hangs, a tavern sign,
   With foolish bold regard
   For cock and hen and loitering men
   And wagons down the yard.
   Raised high above the hayseed world
   He smokes his china pipe;
   And now surveys the orchard ways,
   The damsons clustering ripe –
   Stares at the churchyard slabs beyond,
   Where country neighbours lie:
   Their brief renown set lowly down,
   But his invades the sky.
   He grips a tankard of brown ale
   That spills a generous foam:
   Often he drinks, they say, and winks
   At drunk men lurching home.
   No upstart hero may usurp
   That honoured swinging seat;
   His seasons pass with pipe and glass
   Until the tale’s complete –
   And paint shall keep his buttons bright
   Though all the world’s forgot
   Whether he died for England’s pride
   By battle or by pot.
   A FIGHT TO THE DEATH
   Two blind old men in a blind corridor
   Fought to the death, by sense of sound or touch.
   Doom flailed unseen, an iron hook-hand tore
   Flesh from the enemy’s ribs who swung the crutch.
   One gasped, ‘she looked on me and smiled, I say’,
   So life was battered out, for yea or nay.
   MERMAID, DRAGON, FIEND
   In my childhood rumours ran
   Of a world beyond our door –
   Terrors to the life of man
   That the highroad held in store.
   Of the mermaids’ doleful game
   In deep water I heard tell,
   Of lofty dragons belching flame,
   Of the hornèd fiend of Hell.
   Tales like these were too absurd
   For my laughter-loving ear:
   Soon I mocked at all I heard,
   Though with cause indeed for fear.
   Now I know the mermaid kin
   I find them bound by natural laws:
   They have neither tail nor fin,
   But are deadlier for that cause.
   Dragons have no darting tongues,
   Teeth saw-edged, nor rattling scales;
>   No fire issues from their lungs,
   No black poison from their tails:
   For they are creatures of dark air,
   Unsubstantial tossing forms,
   Thunderclaps of man’s despair
   In mid-whirl of mental storms.
   And there’s a true and only fiend
   Worse than prophets prophesy,
   Whose full powers to hurt are screened
   Lest the race of man should die.
   Ever in vain will courage plot
   The dragon’s death, in coat of proof;
   Or love abjure the mermaid grot;
   Or faith denounce the cloven hoof.
   Mermaids will not be denied
   The last bubbles of our shame,
   The dragon flaunts an unpierced hide,
   The true fiend governs in God’s name.
   CHRISTMAS EVE
   On Christmas Eve the brute Creation
   Lift up their heads and speak with human voices;
   The Ox roars out his song of jubilation
   And the Ass rejoices.
   They dance for mirth in simple credence
   That man from devildom this day was savèd,
   That of his froward spirit he has found riddance:
   They hymn the Son of David.
   Ox and Ass cloistered in stable,
   Break bounds to-night and see what shall astound you,
   A second Fall, a second death of Abel,
   Wars renewed around you.
   Cabals of great men against small men,
   Mobs, murders, informations, the packed jury,
   While Ignorance, the lubber prince of all men,
   Glowers with old-time fury.
   Excellent beasts, resign your speaking,
   Tempted in man’s own choleric tongue to name him,
   Hoof-and-horn vengeance have no thought of wreaking,
   Let your dumb grief shame him.
   THE SNAKE AND THE BULL
   Snake Bull, my namesake, man of wrath,
   By no expense of knives or cloth,
   Only by work of muttered charms
   Could draw all woman to his arms;
   None whom he summoned might resist
   Nor none recall whom once he kissed
   And loosed them from his kiss, by whom
   This mother-shame had come.
   The power of his compelling flame
   Was bound in virtue of our name,
   But when in secret he taught me
   Like him a thief of love to be,
   For half his secret I had found
   And half explored the wizard ground
   Of words, and when giving consent
   Out at his heels I went,
   Then Fessé, jungle-god, whose shape
   
 
 The Complete Poems Page 14