Drink and remember glorious Samothrace!’
   Then you shall drink.
   You shall drink deep of that refreshing draught,
   To become lords of the uninitiated
   Twittering ghosts, Hell’s countless populace –
   To become heroes, knights upon swift horses,
   Pronouncing oracles from tall white tombs
   By the nymphs tended. They with honey water
   Shall pour libations to your serpent shapes,
   That you may drink.
   THESEUS AND ARIADNE
   High on his figured couch beyond the waves
   He dreams, in dream recalling her set walk
   Down paths of oyster-shell bordered with flowers,
   Across the shadowy turf below the vines.
   He sighs: ‘Deep sunk in my erroneous past
   She haunts the ruins and the ravaged lawns.’
   Yet still unharmed it stands, the regal house
   Crooked with age and overtopped by pines
   Where first he wearied of her constancy.
   And with a surer foot she goes than when
   Dread of his hate was thunder in the air,
   When the pines agonized with flaws of wind
   And flowers glared up at her with frantic eyes.
   Of him, now all is done, she never dreams
   But calls a living blessing down upon
   What he supposes rubble and rank grass;
   Playing the queen to nobler company.
   LAMENT FOR PASIPHAË
   Dying sun, shine warm a little longer!
   My eye, dazzled with tears, shall dazzle yours,
   Conjuring you to shine and not to move.
   You, sun, and I all afternoon have laboured
   Beneath a dewless and oppressive cloud –
   A fleece now gilded with our common grief
   That this must be a night without a moon.
   Dying sun, shine warm a little longer!
   Faithless she was not: she was very woman,
   Smiling with dire impartiality,
   Sovereign, with heart unmatched, adored of men,
   Until Spring’s cuckoo with bedraggled plumes
   Tempted her pity and her truth betrayed.
   Then she who shone for all resigned her being,
   And this must be a night without a moon.
   Dying sun, shine warm a little longer!
   THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS
   The impassioned child who stole the axe of power,
   Debauched his virgin mother
   And vowed in rage he would be God the Father,
   Who, grown to strength, strangled her lion twins
   And from a cloud, in chains,
   Hung her with anvils at her ankle bones,
   Who whipped her daughters with a bull’s pizzle,
   Forced them to take the veil
   And heard their loveless prayers with a lewd smile –
   Senile at last the way of all flesh goes:
   Into the kitchen where roast goose,
   Plum-pudding and mince-pies his red robes grease.
   She from the tree-top, true to her deserts,
   With wand and silver skirts
   Presides unravished over all pure hearts.
   COLD WEATHER PROVERB
   Fearless approach and puffed feather
   In birds, famine bespeak;
   In man, belly filled full.
   TO JUAN AT THE WINTER SOLSTICE
   There is one story and one story only
   That will prove worth your telling,
   Whether as learned bard or gifted child;
   To it all lines or lesser gauds belong
   That startle with their shining
   Such common stories as they stray into.
   Is it of trees you tell, their months and virtues,
   Or strange beasts that beset you,
   Of birds that croak at you the Triple will?
   Or of the Zodiac and how slow it turns
   Below the Boreal Crown,
   Prison of all true kings that ever reigned?
   Water to water, ark again to ark,
   From woman back to woman:
   So each new victim treads unfalteringly
   The never altered circuit of his fate,
   Bringing twelve peers as witness
   Both to his starry rise and starry fall.
   Or is it of the Virgin’s silver beauty,
   All fish below the thighs?
   She in her left hand bears a leafy quince;
   When with her right she crooks a finger, smiling,
   How may the King hold back?
   Royally then he barters life for love.
   Or of the undying snake from chaos hatched,
   Whose coils contain the ocean,
   Into whose chops with naked sword he springs,
   Then in black water, tangled by the reeds,
   Battles three days and nights,
   To be spewed up beside her scalloped shore?
   Much snow is falling, winds roar hollowly,
   The owl hoots from the elder,
   Fear in your heart cries to the loving-cup:
   Sorrow to sorrow as the sparks fly upward.
   The log groans and confesses:
   There is one story and one story only.
   Dwell on her graciousness, dwell on her smiling,
   Do not forget what flowers
   The great boar trampled down in ivy time.
   Her brow was creamy as the crested wave,
   Her sea-grey eyes were wild
   But nothing promised that is not performed.
   SATIRES AND GROTESQUES
   THE PERSIAN VERSION
   Truth-loving Persians do not dwell upon
   The trivial skirmish fought near Marathon.
   As for the Greek theatrical tradition
   Which represents that summer’s expedition
   Not as a mere reconnaissance in force
   By three brigades of foot and one of horse
   (Their left flank covered by some obsolete
   Light craft detached from the main Persian fleet)
   But as a grandiose, ill-starred attempt
   To conquer Greece – they treat it with contempt;
   And only incidentally refute
   Major Greek claims, by stressing what repute
   The Persian monarch and the Persian nation
   Won by this salutary demonstration:
   Despite a strong defence and adverse weather
   All arms combined magnificently together.
   THE WEATHER OF OLYMPUS
   Zeus was once overheard to shout at Hera:
   ‘You hate it, do you? Well, I hate it worse –
   East wind in May, sirocco all the Summer.
   Hell take this whole impossible Universe!’
   A scholiast explains his warm rejoinder,
   Which sounds too man-like for Olympic use,
   By noting that the snake-tailed Chthonian winds
   Were answerable to Fate alone, not Zeus.
   APOLLO OF THE PHYSIOLOGISTS
   Despite this learned cult’s official
   And seemingly sincere denial
   That they either reject or postulate
   God, or God’s scientific surrogate,
   Prints of a deity occur passim
   Throughout their extant literature. They make him
   A dumb, dead-pan Apollo with a profile
   Drawn in Victorian-Hellenistic style –
   The pallid, bald, partitioned head suggesting
   Wholly abstract cerebral functioning;
   Or nude and at full length, this deity
   Displays digestive, venous, respiratory
   And nervous systems painted in bold colour
   On his immaculate exterior.
   Sometimes, in verso, a bald, naked Muse,
   His consort, flaunts her arteries and sinews,
   While, upside-down, crouched in her chaste abdomen,
   Adored by men and wondered at by women,
 />   Hangs a Victorian-Hellenistic foetus –
   Fruit of her academic god’s afflatus.
   THE OLDEST SOLDIER
   The sun shines warm on seven old soldiers
   Paraded in a row,
   Perched like starlings on the railings –
   Give them plug-tobacco!
   They’ll croon you the Oldest-Soldier Song:
   Of Harry who took a holiday
   From the sweat of ever thinking for himself
   Or going his own bloody way.
   It was arms-drill, guard and kit-inspection,
   Like dreams of a long train-journey,
   And the barrack-bed that Harry dossed on
   Went rockabye, rockabye, rockabye.
   Harry kept his rifle and brasses clean,
   But Jesus Christ, what a liar!
   He won the Military Medal
   For his coolness under fire.
   He was never the last on parade
   Nor the first to volunteer,
   And when Harry rose to be storeman
   He seldom had to pay for his beer.
   Twenty-one years, and out Harry came
   To be odd-job man, or janitor,
   Or commissionaire at a picture-house,
   Or, some say, bully to a whore.
   But his King and Country calling Harry,
   He reported again at the Depôt,
   To perch on this railing like a starling,
   The oldest soldier of the row.
   GROTESQUES
   I
   My Chinese uncle, gouty, deaf, half-blinded,
   And more than a trifle absent-minded,
   Astonished all St James’s Square one day
   By giving long and unexceptionably exact directions
   To a little coolie girl, who’d lost her way.
   II
   The Lion-faced Boy at the Fair
   And the Heir Apparent
   Were equally slow at remembering people’s faces.
   But whenever they met, incognito, in the Brazilian
   Pavilion, the Row and such-like places,
   They exchanged, it is said, their sternest nods –
   Like gods of dissimilar races.
   III
   Dr Newman with the crooked pince-nez
   Had studied in Vienna and Chicago.
   Chess was his only relaxation.
   And Dr Newman remained unperturbed
   By every nastier manifestation
   Of pluto-democratic civilization:
   All that was cranky, corny, ill-behaved,
   Unnecessary, askew or orgiastic
   Would creep unbidden to his side-door (hidden
   Behind a poster in the Tube Station,
   Nearly half-way up the moving stairs),
   Push its way in, to squat there undisturbed
   Among box-files and tubular steel-chairs.
   He was once seen at the Philharmonic Hall
   Noting the reactions of two patients,
   With pronounced paranoiac tendencies,
   To old Dutch music. He appeared to recall
   A tin of lozenges in his breast-pocket,
   Put his hand confidently in –
   And drew out a black imp, or sooterkin,
   Six inches long, with one ear upside-down,
   Licking at a vanilla ice-cream cornet –
   Then put it back again with a slight frown.
   IV
   A Royal Duke, with no campaigning medals
   To dignify his Orders, he would speak
   Nostalgically at times of Mozambique
   Where once the ship he cruised in ran aground:
   How he drank cocoa, from a sailor’s mug,
   Poured from the common jug,
   While loyal toasts went round.
   V
   Sir John addressed the Snake-god in his temple,
   Which was full of bats, not as a votary
   But with the somewhat cynical courtesy,
   Just short of condescension,
   He might have paid the Governor-General
   Of a small, hot, backward colony.
   He was well versed in primitive religion,
   But found this an embarrassing occasion:
   The God was immense, noisy and affable,
   Began to tickle him with a nervous chuckle,
   Unfobbed a great gold clock for him to listen,
   Hissed like a snake, and swallowed him at one mouthful.
   VI
   All horses on the racecourse of Tralee
   Have four more legs in gallop than in trot –
   Two pairs fully extended, two pairs not;
   And yet no thoroughbred with either three
   Or five legs but is mercilessly shot.
   I watched a filly gnaw her fifth leg free,
   Warned by a speaking mare since turned silentiary.
   THE EUGENIST
   Come, human dogs, interfertilitate –
   Blackfellow and white lord, brown, yellow and red!
   Accept the challenge of the lately bred
   Newfoundland terrier with the dachshund gait.1
   Breed me gigantic pygmies, meek-eyed Scots,
   Phlegmatic Irish, perfume-hating Poles,
   Poker-faced, toothy, pigtailed Hottentots,
   And Germans with no envy in their souls.
   1805
   At Viscount Nelson’s lavish funeral,
   While the mob milled and yelled about St Paul’s,
   A General chatted with an Admiral:
   ‘One of your Colleagues, Sir, remarked today
   That Nelson’s exit, though to be lamented,
   Falls not inopportunely, in its way.’
   ‘He was a thorn in our flesh,’ came the reply –
   ‘The most bird-witted, unaccountable,
   Odd little runt that ever I did spy.
   ‘One arm, one peeper, vain as Pretty Poll,
   A meddler, too, in foreign politics
   And gave his heart in pawn to a plain moll.
   ‘He would dare lecture us Sea Lords, and then
   Would treat his ratings as though men of honour
   And play at leap-frog with his midshipmen!
   ‘We tried to box him down, but up he popped,
   And when he’d banged Napoleon at the Nile
   Became too much the hero to be dropped.
   ‘You’ve heard that Copenhagen “blind eye” story?
   We’d tied him to Nurse Parker’s apron-strings –
   By G–d, he snipped them through and snatched the glory!’
   ‘Yet,’ cried the General, ‘six-and-twenty sail
   Captured or sunk by him off Tráfalgár –
   That writes a handsome finis to the tale.’
   ‘Handsome enough. The seas are England’s now.
   That fellow’s foibles need no longer plague us.
   He died most creditably, I’ll allow.’
   ‘And, Sir, the secret of his victories?’
   ‘By his unServicelike, familiar ways, Sir,
   He made the whole Fleet love him, damn his eyes!’
   AT THE SAVOY CHAPEL
   [From World’s Press News, 22 February, 1945. ‘Alexander Clifford, the war correspondent, is today marrying Flight Officer Jenny Nicholson, daughter of Robert Graves. They met in the front line.’]
   Up to the wedding, formal with heirloom lace,
   Press-cameras, carnations out of season,
   Well-mellowed priest and well-trained choristers,
   The relatives come marching, such as meet
   Only at weddings and at funerals,
   The elder generation with the eldest.
   Family features for years undecided
   What look to wear against a loveless world
   Fix, as the wind veers, in the same grimace.
   Each eyes the others with a furtive pity:
   ‘Heavens, how she has aged – and he,
   Grey hair and sunken cheeks, what a changed man!’
   They stare wistfully at the bride (released
 />   From brass buttons and the absurd salute)
   In long white gown, bouquet and woman’s pride.
   ‘How suitable!’ they whisper, and the whisper
   ‘How suitable!’ rustles from pew to pew;
   To which I nod suitably grave assent.
   Now for you, loving ones, who kneel at the altar
   And preside afterwards at table –
   The trophy sword that shears the cake recalling
   What god you entertained last year together,
   His bull neck looped with guts,
   Trampling corpse-carpet through the villages –
   Here is my private blessing: so to remain
   As today you are, with features
   Resolute and unchangeably your own.
   From Collected Poems (1914–1947)
   (1948)
   TO POETS UNDER PISCES
   Until the passing years establish
   Aquarius who with fruitful spate
   All dried pools will at last replenish,
   Resign yourselves to celebrate,
   Poets, with grief or hate,
   These gasping rainbowed flurries of the Fish.
   JUNE
   June, the jolly season of most bloodshed:
   Soldiers with roses in their rifle barrels
   And children, cherries bobbing at their ears,
   Who roar them on like furious adjutants
   Where the broad oak its feathered bonnet rears.
   THE LAST DAY OF LEAVE
   (1916)
   We five looked out over the moor
   At rough hills blurred with haze, and a still sea:
   Our tragic day, bountiful from the first.
   We would spend it by the lily lake
   (High in a fold beyond the farthest ridge),
   Following the cart-track till it faded out.
   The time of berries and bell-heather;
   Yet all that morning nobody went by
   But shepherds and one old man carting turfs.
   We were in love: he with her, she with him,
   And I, the youngest one, the odd man out,
   As deep in love with a yet nameless muse.
   No cloud; larks and heath-butterflies,
   And herons undisturbed fishing the streams;
   A slow cool breeze that hardly stirred the grass.
   When we hurried down the rocky slope,
   A flock of ewes galloping off in terror,
   There shone the waterlilies, yellow and white.
   Deep water and a shelving bank.
   
 
 The Complete Poems Page 40