Into consideration; you have proved,
   Surely, a model prisoner?
   The worst is finding where your fault lay
   In all its pettiness; do you regret
   It was not some cardinal, outrageous sin
   That drew crowds to the gibbet?
   THE STRAYED MESSAGE
   Characteristic, nevertheless strange:
   Something went badly wrong at the Exchange,
   And my private message to you, in full detail,
   Got broadcast over eleven frequencies
   With the usual, though disquieting, consequences
   Of a torrential amatory fan-mail.
   SONG: THE SUNDIAL’S LAMENT
   (Air: The Groves of Blarney)
   Since much at home on
   My face and gnomon,
   The sun refuses
   Daylight to increase;
   Yet certain powers dare
   Miscount my hours there
   Though sun and shadow
   Still collogue in peace.
   These rogues aspire
   To act Hezekiah
   For whom Isaiah
   In a day of trial,
   All for delaying
   His end by praying
   Turned back the shadow
   On my honest dial.
   Nay, Sirs, though willing
   To abase the shilling
   From noble twelvepence
   To the half of ten,
   Pray go no further
   On this path of murther:
   If hours be Dismalized,
   Sure, I’m finished then.
   POEM: A REMINDER
   Capital letters prompting every line,
   Lines printed down the centre of each page,
   Clear spaces between groups of these, combine
   In a convention of respectable age
   To mean: ‘Read carefully. Each word we chose
   Has rhythm and sound and sense. This is not prose.’
   poem: a reminder
   capitallett
   -ers prompting ev
   -eryline lines printed down the
   cen
   -tre of each page clear
   spaces between
   groups of these combine in a con
   of respectable age to mean read
   care
   -fully each word we chose has
   rhythm and
   sound and
   sense this is
   notprose
   ANTORCHA Y CORONA, 1968
   Píndaro no soy, sino caballero
   De San Patricio; y nuestro santo
   Siglos atrás se hizo mejicano.
   Todos aquí alaban las mujeres
   Y con razón, como divinos seres –
   Por eso entrará en mis deberes
   A vuestra Olimpiada mejicana
   El origen explicar de la corona:
   En su principio fué femenina….
   Antes que Hercules con paso largo
   Metros midiera para el estadio
   Miles de esfuerzos así alentado –
   Ya antes, digo, allí existia
   Otra carrera mas apasionada
   La cual presidia la Diosa Hera.
   La virgen que, a su fraternidad
   Supero con maxima velocidad
   Ganaba el premio de la santidad:
   La corona de olivo…. Me perdonará
   El respetable, si de Atalanta
   Sueño, la corredora engañada
   Con tres manzanas, pero de oro fino….
   Y si los mitos griegos hoy resumo
   Es que parecen de acuerdo pleno,
   A la inventora primeval del juego,
   A la Santa Madre, más honores dando
   Que no a su portero deportivo.
   En tres cientas trece Olimpiadas
   Este nego la entrada a las damas
   Amenazandolas, ai, con espadas!
   Aquí, por fin, brindemos por la linda
   Enriqueta de Basilio: la primera
   Que nos honra con antorcha y corona.*
   TORCH AND CROWN, 1968
   (English translation of the foregoing)
   No Pindar, I, but a poor gentleman
   Of Irish race. Patrick, our learned saint,
   Centuries past made himself Mexican.
   All true-bred Mexicans idolize women
   And with sound reason, as divine beings,
   I therefore owe it you as my clear duty
   At your Olympics, here in Mexico,
   To explain the origin of the olive crown:
   In the Golden Age women alone could wear it.
   Long before Hercules with his huge stride
   Paced out the circuit of a stadium,
   Provoking men to incalculable efforts,
   Long, long before, in Argos, had been run
   Even more passionately, a girls’ foot race
   Under the watchful eye of Mother Hera.
   The inspired runner who outstripped all rivals
   Of her sorority and finished first
   Bore off that coveted and holy prize –
   The olive crown. Ladies and gentlemen,
   Forgive me if I brood on Atalanta,
   A champion quarter-miler tricked one day
   By three gold apples tumbled on her track;
   And if I plague you with these ancient myths
   That is because none of them disagrees
   In paying higher honours to the foundress
   Of all competitive sport – the Holy Mother –
   Than to her sportive janitor, Hercules.
   Three hundred and thirteen Olympic Games
   Hercules held, though warning off all ladies,
   Even as audience, with the naked sword!
   So homage to Enriqueta de Basilio
   Of Mexico, the first girl who has ever
   Honoured these Games with torch and olive crown!
   ARMISTICE DAY, 1918
   What’s all this hubbub and yelling,
   Commotion and scamper of feet,
   With ear-splitting clatter of kettles and cans,
   Wild laughter down Mafeking Street?
   O, those are the kids whom we fought for
   (You might think they’d been scoffing our rum)
   With flags that they waved when we marched off to war
   In the rapture of bugle and drum.
   Now they’ll hang Kaiser Bill from a lamp-post,
   Von Tirpitz they’ll hang from a tree….
   We’ve been promised a ‘Land Fit for Heroes’ –
   What heroes we heroes must be!
   And the guns that we took from the Fritzes,
   That we paid for with rivers of blood,
   Look, they’re hauling them down to Old Battersea Bridge
   Where they’ll topple them, souse, in the mud!
   But there’s old men and women in corners
   With tears falling fast on their cheeks,
   There’s the armless and legless and sightless –
   It’s seldom that one of them speaks.
   And there’s flappers gone drunk and indecent
   Their skirts kilted up to the thigh,
   The constables lifting no hand in reproof
   And the chaplain averting his eye….
   When the days of rejoicing are over,
   When the flags are stowed safely away,
   They will dream of another wild ‘War to End Wars’
   And another wild Armistice day.
   But the boys who were killed in the trenches,
   Who fought with no rage and no rant,
   We left them stretched out on their pallets of mud
   Low down with the worm and the ant.
   THE MOTES
   You like to joke about young love
   Because (let me be just)
   In your dead courts and corridors
   Motes dance upon no sunbeams
   But settle down as dust.
   From Poems About Love
   (1969)
   IF AND WHEN
   She ha
tes an if, know that for sure:
   Whether in cunning or self-torture,
   Your ifs anticipate the when
   That womankind conceals from men.
   From Poems 1968–1970
   (1970)
   SONG: THE SIGIL
   Stumbling up an unfamiliar stairway
   Between my past and future
   And overtaken by the shadowy mind
   Of a girl dancing for love,
   I glanced over my shoulder.
   She had read my secret name, that was no doubt,
   For which how could I blame her?
   Her future paired so gently with my own,
   Her past so innocently,
   It flung me in a fever.
   Thereupon, as on every strange occasion,
   The past relived its future
   With what outdid all hopes and fantasies –
   How could I not concede
   My sigil in its favour?
   SONG: TWINNED HEART
   Challenged once more to reunite,
   Perfect in every limb
   But screened against the intrusive light
   By ghosts and cherubim,
   I call your beauty to my bed,
   My pride you call to yours
   Though clouds run maniac overhead
   And cruel rain down pours,
   With both of us prepared to wake
   Each in a bed apart,
   True to a spell no power can break:
   The beat of a twinned heart.
   SONG: OLIVE TREE
   Call down a blessing
   On that green sapling,
   A sudden blessing
   For true love’s sake
   On that green sapling
   Framed by our window
   With her leaves twinkling
   As we lie awake.
   Two birds flew from her
   In the eye of morning
   Their folded feathers
   In the sun to shake.
   Augury recorded,
   Vision rewarded
   With an arrow flying
   With a sudden sting,
   With a sure blessing,
   With a double dart,
   With a starry ring,
   With music from the mountains
   In the air, in the heart
   This bright May morning
   Re-echoing.
   SONG: ONCE MORE
   These quiet months of watching for
   An endless moment of once more
   May not be shortened,
   But while we share them at a distance,
   In irreproachable persistence,
   Are strangely brightened.
   And these long hours of perfect sleep
   When company in love we keep,
   By time unstraitened,
   Yield us a third of the whole year
   In which to embrace each other here,
   Sleeping together, watching for
   An endless moment of once more
   By dreams enlightened.
   SONG: VICTIMS OF CALUMNY
   Equally innocent,
   Confused by evil,
   Pondering the event,
   Aloof and penitent,
   With hearts left sore
   By a cruel calumny,
   With eyes half-open now
   To its warped history,
   But undeceivably
   Both in love once more.
   LOVE GIFTS
   Though love be gained only by truth in love
   Never by gifts, yet there are gifts of love
   That match or enhance beauty, that indeed
   Fetch beauty with them. Always the man gives,
   Never the woman – unless flowers or berries
   Or pebbles from the shore.
   She welcomes jewels
   To ponder and pore over tremblingly
   By candlelight. ‘Why does he love me so,
   Divining my concealed necessities?’
   And afterwards (there is no afterwards
   In perfect love, nor further call for gifts)
   Writes: ‘How you spoil me!’, meaning: ‘You are mine’,
   But sends him cornflowers, pinks and columbine.
   MANKIND AND OCEAN
   You celebrate with kisses the good fortune
   Of a new and cloudless moon
   (Also the tide’s good fortune),
   Content with July fancies
   To brown your naked bodies
   On the slopes of a sea-dune.
   Mankind and Ocean, Ocean and mankind:
   Those fatal tricks of temper,
   Those crooked acts of murder
   Provoked by the wind –
   I am no Ocean lover,
   Nor can I love mankind.
   To love the Ocean is to taste salt,
   To drink the blood of sailors,
   To watch the waves assault
   Mast-high a cliff that shudders
   Under their heartless hammers….
   Is wind alone at fault?
   VIRGIN MIRROR
   Souls in virginity joined together
   Rest unassailable:
   Ours is no undulant fierce rutting fever
   But clear unbroken lunar magic able
   To mirror loves illimitable.
   When first we chose this power of being
   I never paused to warn you
   What ruinous charms the world was weaving;
   I knew you for a child fostered in virtue
   And swore no hand could hurt you.
   Then should I suffer nightmares now
   Lest you, grown somewhat older,
   Be lured to accept a worldly where and how,
   Carelessly breathing on the virgin mirror,
   Clouding love’s face for ever?
   SECRET THEATRE
   When from your sleepy mind the day’s burden
   Falls like a bushel sack on a barn floor,
   Be prepared for music, for natural mirages
   And for night’s incomparable parade of colour.
   Neither of us daring to assume direction
   Of an unforeseen and fiery entertainment,
   We clutch hands in the seventh row of the stalls
   And watch together, quivering, astonished, silent.
   It is hours past midnight now; a flute signals
   Far off; we mount the stage as though at random,
   Boldly ring down the curtain, then dance out our love:
   Lost to the outraged, humming auditorium.
   HOW IT STARTED
   It started, unexpectedly of course,
   At a wild midnight dance, in my own garden,
   To which indeed I was not invited:
   I read: ‘Teen-agers only.’
   In the circumstances I stayed away
   Until you fetched me out on the tiled floor
   Where, acting as an honorary teen-ager,
   I kicked off both my shoes.
   Since girls like you must set the stage always,
   With lonely men for choreographers,
   I chose the step, I even called the tune;
   And we both danced entranced.
   Here the narrator pauses circumspectly,
   Knowing me not unpassionate by nature
   And the situation far from normal:
   Two apple-seeds had sprouted….
   Recordable history began again
   With you no longer in your late teens
   And me socially (once more) my age –
   Yet that was where it started.
   BRIEF REUNION
   Our one foreboding was: we might forget
   How strangely close absence had drawn us,
   How close once more we must be drawn by parting –
   Absence, dark twin of presence!
   Nor could such closeness be attained by practice
   Of even the most heroic self-deceit:
   Only by inbred faculties far wiser
   Than any carnal sense –
   Progress in which had disciplined us both
   To the same doting pride: a stoicism
   Which might confuse, at every brief reunion,
   Presence with pangs of absence.
   And if this pride should overshoot its mark,
   Forcing on us a raw indifference
   To what might happen when our hearts were fired
   By renewed hours of presence?
   Could we forget what carnal pangs had seized us
   Three summers past in a burst of moonlight,
   Making us more possessive of each other
   Than either dared concede? – a prescience
   Of the vast grief that each sublunary pair
   Transmits at last to its chance children
   With tears of violence.
   THE JUDGES
   Crouched on wet shingle at the cove
   In day-long search for treasure-trove –
   Meaning the loveliest-patterned pebble,
   Of any colour imaginable,
   Ground and smoothed by a gentle sea –
   How seldom, Julia, we agree
   On our day’s find: the perfect one
   To fetch back home when day is done,
   Splendid enough to stupefy
   The fiercest, most fastidious eye –
   Tossing which back we tell the sea:
   ‘Work on it one more century!’
   LOVE AND NIGHT
   Though your professions, ages and conditions
   Might seem to any sober person
   Irreconcilable,
   Yet still you claim the inalienable right
   To kiss in corners and exchange long letters
   Patterned with well-pierced hearts.
   When judges, dazzled by your blazing eyes,
   Mistake you both for Seventh Day Adventists
   (Heaven rest their innocent souls!)
   You smile impassively and say no word –
   The why and how of magic being tabu
   Even in courts of Law.
   Who could have guessed that your unearthly glow
   Conceals a power no judgement can subdue,
   Nor act of God, nor death?
   Your love is not desire but certainty,
   Perfect simultaneity,
   Inheritance not conquest;
   Long silences divide its delicate phases
   With simple absence, almost with unbeing,
   Before each new resurgence.
   Such love has clues to a riddling of the maze:
   Should you let fall the thread, grope for it,
   Unawed by the thick gloom.
   
 
 The Complete Poems Page 58