When in my first and loneliest love I saw
   The sun swim down in tears to meet the sea,
   When woods and clouds and mountains massed their awe
   To whelm the house of torment that was me,
   When spirits below the cromlech heard me pass,
   Belling their hate with such malignant cries
   That horror and anguish rustled through the grass
   And the very flowers glared up with oafish eyes,
   Then round I turned where rose the death-white Fay
   And knew her well that exercised her wand,
   That spurred my heart with rowellings day by day
   To the very reach of madness, and beyond,
   Thee, Moon, whom now I flout, by thought made bold,
   Naked, my Joseph’s garment in thy hold.
   FOUR CHILDREN
   As I lay quietly in the grass,
   Half dreaming, half awake,
   I saw four children barefoot pass
   Across the tufted brake:
   The sky was glass, the pools were glass,
   And not a leaf did shake.
   The autumn berries clustered thick,
   Seldom I met with more;
   I thought these children come to pick,
   As many picked before;
   Each had a long and crooked stick,
   And crowns of ash they wore.
   But not one berry did they take;
   Gliding, I watched them go
   Hand in hand across the brake
   With sallies to and fro.
   So half asleep and half awake
   I guessed what now I know.
   They were not children, live and rough,
   Nor phantoms of the dead,
   But spirits woven of airy stuff
   By wandering fancy led,
   Creatures of silence, fair enough
   No sooner seen than sped.
   THE BARGAIN
   The stable door was open wide:
   I heard voices, looked inside.
   Six candle-yellow birds were set
   In a cage of silver net,
   Shaking wing, preening feather,
   Whistling loudly all together.
   Two most ancient withered fairies
   Bartered rings against canaries,
   Haggled with a courteous cunning -
   Hinting, boasting, teasing, punning
   In a half-remembered tongue.
   ‘Too low an offer!’ ‘Times are bad.’
   ‘Too low!’ ‘By far the best you have had.’
   ‘Raise it!’ Then what a song was sung:
   ‘Dicky is a pretty lad!
   Dicky is a pretty lad!’
   But diamonds twinkled with light flung
   By twelve impatient golden wings,
   The younger merchant took the rings,
   Closed his bargain with a sigh,
   And sadly wished his flock ‘Goodbye.’
   Goodbye, goodbye, in fairy speech
   With a sugar-peck for each
   Unsuspecting bright canary.
   ‘Fare you well.’
   A sudden airy
   Gust of midnight slammed the door.
   Out went the lights: I heard no more.
   IN THE BEGINNING WAS A WORD
   The difficulty was, it was
   Simple, as simple as it seemed;
   Needing no scrutinizing glass,
   No intense light to be streamed
   Upon it. It said what it said
   Singly, without backthought or whim,
   With all the strictness of the dead,
   Past reason and past synonym.
   But they, too dull to understand,
   Laboriously improvised
   A mystic allegory, and
   A meaning at last recognized:
   A revelation and a cause,
   Crowding the cluttered stage again
   With saints’ and sinners’ lies and laws
   For a new everlasting reign.
   THE BAIT
   My wish, even my ambition
   (For such ambition spells no diminution
   Of virtue, strict in self-possession),
   Is not, to deaden the mind
   To be resigned
   To take the insistent bait
   To be hauled out, hooked and hulking;
   Is not, to refuse the bait,
   To be angry, to go hungry,
   To lodge in the mud, to be sulking:
   It is, I would surge toward these troubles
   Trailing a row of easy bubbles;
   Would gulp the bait, the hook, rod, reel,
   Fisherman and creel,
   Converting even the landing-net’s tough mesh,
   The spaced and regular knots, to wholesome flesh;
   And would subside again, resume my occupation,
   With ‘yes and no’ for what showed blank negation:
   So, would remain just fish.
   That, or something of that, is my wish.
   AN INDEPENDENT
   The warring styles both claim him as their man
   But undisturbed, resisting either pull
   He paints each picture on its own right plan
   As unexpected as inevitable.
   They while admitting that this treatment is
   Its own justification, take offence
   At his unmodish daily practices:
   Granting him genius, they deny him sense.
   He grinds his paints in his own studio,
   Has four legitimate children (odd!) and thinks
   Of little else; he dresses like a crow,
   Keeps with his wife and neither smokes nor drinks.
   When painting is discussed, he takes no part,
   Pretends he’s dull; and who can call his bluff?
   The styles protest, while honouring his art,
   He will not take Art seriously enough.
   [THE UNTIDY MAN]
   There was a man, a very untidy man,
   Whose fingers could nowhere be found to put in his tomb.
   He had rolled his head far underneath the bed:
   He had left his legs and arms lying all over the room.
   1934–1939
   MIDSUMMER DUET*
   First Voice
   O think what joy that now
   Have burst the pent grenades of summer
   And out sprung all the angry hordes
   To be but stuttering storm of bees
   On lisping swoon of flowers –
   That such winged agitation
   From midge to nightingale astir
   These lesser plagues of sting and song
   But looses on the world, our world.
   O think what peace that now
   Our roads from house to sea go strewn
   With fast fatigue – time’s burning footsounds,
   Devilish in our winter ears,
   Cooled to a timeless standstill
   As ourselves from house to sea we move
   Unmoving, on dumb shores to pledge
   New disbelief in ills to come
   More monstrous than the old extremes.
   Second Voice
   And what regret that now
   The dog-star has accomplished wholly
   That promise April hinted with
   Faint blossom on her hungry branches,
   And pallid hedgerow shoots?
   Exuberance so luscious
   Of fruit and sappy briar
   Disgusts: midsummer’s passion chokes
   ‘No more!’ – a trencher heaped too high.
   And O what dearth that now
   We have sufficient dwelling here
   Immune to hopes gigantical
   That once found lodgement in our heart.
   What if less shrewd we were
   And the Dog’s mad tooth evaded not –
   But quick, the sweet froth on our lips,
   Reached at fulfilments whose remove
   Gave muscle to our faith at least?
   First Voice
   Let prophecy 
now cease
   In that from mothering omens came
   Neither the early dragon nor the late
   To startle sleeping errantries
   Or blaze unthinkable futures.
   The births have not been strange enough;
   Half-pestilential miseries
   At ripeness failed of horrid splendour.
   Our doomsday is a rabbit-age
   Lost in the sleeve of expectation.
   Let winter be less sharp
   In that the heats of purpose
   Have winter foreflight in their wings,
   Shaking a frostiness of thought
   Over those aestive fancies
   Which now so inwardly belie
   (Their fury tepid to our minds)
   The outward boast of season –
   We need not press the cold this year
   Since warmth has grown so honest.
   Second Voice
   Let talk of wonders cease
   Now that outlandish realms can hold
   No prodigies so marvellous as once
   The ten-years-lost adventurer
   Would stretch our usual gaze with.
   The golden apple’s rind offends
   Our parks, and dew-lapped mountaineers
   Unbull themselves by common physic.
   There comes no news can take us from
   Loyalty to this latter sameness.
   Let the bold calendar
   Too garrulous in counting
   Fortunes of solar accident
   Weary, and festive pipes be soft.
   Madness rings not so far now
   Around the trysting-oak of time;
   Midsummer’s gentler by the touch
   Of other tragic pleasures.
   We need not write so large this year
   The dances or the dirges.
   First Voice
   But what, my friend, of love –
   If limbs revive to overtake
   The backward miles that memory
   Tracks in corporeal chaos?
   Shall you against the lull of censoring mind
   Not let the bones of nature run
   On fleshlorn errands, journey-proud –
   If ghosts go rattling after kisses,
   Shall your firmed mouth not quiver with
   Desires it once spoke beauty by?
   And what of beauty, friend –
   If eyes constrict to clear our world
   Of doubt-flung sights and ether’s phantom spaces
   Cobwebbed where miserly conceit
   Hoarded confusion like infinity?
   If vision has horizon now,
   Shall you not vex the tyrant eyes
   To pity, pleading blindness?
   Second Voice
   But what, my friend, of death,
   That has the dark sense and the bright,
   Illumes the sombre hour of thought,
   Fetches the flurry of bat-souls?
   Shall you not at this shriven perfect watch
   Survey my death-selves with a frown
   And scold that I am not more calm?
   Shall you not on our linking wisdoms
   Loathe the swart shapes I living wear
   In being dead, yet not a corpse?
   And what of jest and play –
   If caution against waggishness
   (Lest I look backward) makes my mood too canting?
   Shall you not mock my pious ways,
   Finding in gloom no certain grace or troth,
   And raise from moony regions of your smile
   Light spirits, nimbler on the toe,
   Which nothing are -I no one?
   First Voice
   Suppose the cock were not to crow
   At whitening of night
   To warn that once again
   The spectrum of incongruence
   Will reasonably unfold
   From day’s indulgent prism?
   Second Voice
   Suppose the owl were not to hoot
   At deepening of sleep
   To warn that once again
   The gospel of oblivion
   Will pompously be droned
   From pulpit-tops of dream?
   First Voice
   And shall the world our world have end
   In miracles of general palsy,
   Abject apocalyptic trances
   Wherein creature and element
   Surrender being in a God-gasp?
   Both Voices
   Or shall the world our world renew
   At worn midsummer’s temporal ailing,
   Marshal the season which senescence
   Proclaimed winter but we now know
   For the first nip of mind’s hereafter?
   MAJORCAN LETTER, 1935*
   This year we are all back again in time –
   For a year: excellent: in our zeal
   We had abandoned, like new converts,
   Certain practices which serve good sense
   Under all cosmic flags. The later mind,
   For instance, has a need of News as constant
   As the earlier; strangers inhabit
   Every liveable condition, and we cannot
   Regulate our own affairs without at least
   Such distancing (if not entire annulment)
   Of theirs as with the reading of our papers
   We had learnt to exert on foreign conduct.
   A talent not to let lapse: the years
   Increased the alien volume, few matters
   Remained domestic. The need of privacy
   Is as strong as ever, nor to be satisfied
   Without a public universe to wall
   The central reservations. Excellent then,
   Those habits of concern with wars, politics,
   Impromptu heroes, successes, tragedies,
   All weather-mystic to the personal heart,
   Substance of outer flush and evanescence;
   Scientific rediscoveries of truths
   Long known by natural names and numbers;
   Theories of God, Finance, Verse and Diet
   Called ‘modern’ because indeed many but now
   First reflect on these primitive subjects,
   As if wisdom had ceased to descend
   And life were the amazed infant again.
   It is well to look out from our discreet windows
   With a still curious eye. It is well
   To look upon the stale wonders and tumults
   And, knowing the recent for ancient,
   Remember how we are surrounded ever
   As yesterday and once by the remote
   Great populations of infinity;
   And to keep advised how small-immediate
   The space of final conference remains.
   Communism is a mighty plan
   For turning bread into a doctrine.
   And each shall have as much doctrine
   As bread: what could be simpler?
   Religion was never so accurate.
   But haven’t they forgotten the wine?
   Perhaps, after all, as they say,
   Drinking is a lost art.
   One still sees interesting recipes
   For soups, but on the whole
   The world is a drier place.
   Ships do not merely no longer splash:
   The very ocean has become
   An abstraction whereon hotels
   Convey the traveller to hotels
   In the true spirit of competition,
   Whose devices are more humane
   Than Nature’s, which after all
   Is too literal-minded
   For the comfortable accommodation
   Of man’s ubiquitous imagination.
   In fact, water is an extinct element
   Save for the quaint trickle in the taps
   Wherewith they lay the ghosts
   Of former hygienes, puny
   To the present genii
   Of vapours, creams and lotions.
   Drinking is a lost art,
   Baptism a lost rite,
   Water a lost element.
   Seaside balsam soothes away
   The wetness sustained
   In the exorcizing of wetness,
   With the assistance of the sun.
   And, the waves having by argument
   Of logical progress from wet to dry
   Undergone vigorous evaporation,
   The world-at-large takes to the air-at-large,
   In more generous fulfilment
   Of the historic farewell
   Governing the scattering of peoples
   And senses: with a goodbye
   More absolute than the mariner’s
   Salt tear and world-ho.
   We are perfectly informed, you see,
   In the character and manner
   Of life as it is now lived
   Around us and around us
   And now and now and now
   Along the ever-widening
   Periphery of this modest
   Memorial to coherence
   Wherein ourselves have domicile.
   (The three elements involved
   In questions of this kind,
   Our lawyer tells us,
   Are Nationality, Residence
   And Domicile. By Nationality
   Is meant the political relationship
   Existing between ourselves
   And the sovereign states to which we owe –
   But we, and our respective states,
   Consider these formalities
   Sacred to unpleasant incidents
   Abroad, where our Consuls maintain us
   In the liberty of feeling at home
   Wherever the birth-days guaranteed
   Mortal by our respective states
   Find us in our post-national age.
   Residence merely implies
   The place we happen to dwell in
   At a particular moment:
   A word for the body absent
   On the body’s errands–
   ‘A purely physical fact’
   Our lawyer explicitly avows.
   Each sleeps in many beds
   During a lifetime of acquiring
   Command over the limbs,
   Till we are able, without regret,
   To exact that permanence
   Which our lawyer calls ‘Domicil’–
   He spells it without ‘e’, please note,
   Terribly, insisting the spirit
   Of the law before the letter.
   ‘Domicil is a combination
   Of facts and intention.’
   We intend to remain thus
   Resident in definite us
   ‘For an indefinite time’–
   Time, after the legal years
   Have been passed, the numbers crossed out,
   And no new counting can be done,
   Becomes ‘an indefinite time’,
   Which is to say we may safely
   At any time go back, to consult
   
 
 The Complete Poems Page 68