If so, let us forge ahead, straight on
   If we’re going to sleep the sleep with those
   That fall forever, knowing none
   Of this land whereon the wrong road goes.
   BOMBARDMENT
   THE TOWN has opened to the sun.
   Like a flat red lily with a million petals
   She unfolds, she comes undone.
   A sharp sky brushes upon
   The myriad glittering chimney-tips
   As she gently exhales to the sun.
   Hurrying creatures run
   Down the labyrinth of the sinister flower.
   What is it they shun?
   A dark bird falls from the sun.
   It curves in a rush to the heart of the vast
   Flower: the day has begun.
   WINTER-LULL
   Because of the silent snow, we are all hushed
   Into awe.
   No sound of guns, nor overhead no rushed
   Vibration to draw
   Our attention out of the void wherein we are crushed.
   A crow floats past on level wings
   Noiselessly.
   Uninterrupted silence swings
   Invisibly, inaudibly
   To and fro in our misgivings.
   We do not look at each other, we hide
   Our daunted eyes.
   White earth, and ruins, ourselves, and nothing beside.
   It all belies
   Our existence; we wait, and are still denied.
   We are folded together, men and the snowy ground
   Into nullity.
   There is silence, only the silence, never a sound
   Nor a verity
   To assist us; disastrously silence-bound!
   THE ATTACK
   WHEN we came out of the wood
   Was a great light!
   The night uprisen stood
   In white.
   I wondered, I looked around
   It was so fair. The bright
   Stubble upon the ground
   Shone white
   Like any field of snow;
   Yet warm the chase
   Of faint night-breaths did go
   Across my face!
   White-bodied and warm the night was,
   Sweet-scented to hold in my throat.
   White and alight the night was.
   A pale stroke smote
   The pulse through the whole bland being
   Which was This and me;
   A pulse that still went fleeing,
   Yet did not flee.
   After the terrible rage, the death,
   This wonder stood glistening?
   All shapes of wonder, with suspended breath,
   Arrested listening
   In ecstatic reverie.
   The whole, white Night! —
   With wonder, every black tree
   Blossomed outright.
   I saw the transfiguration
   And the present Host.
   Transubstantiation
   Of the Luminous Ghost.
   OBSEQUIAL ODE
   SURELY you’ve trodden straight
   To the very door!
   Surely you took your fate
   Faultlessly. Now it’s too late
   To say more.
   It is evident you were right,
   That man has a course to go
   A voyage to sail beyond the charted seas.
   You have passed from out of sight
   And my questions blow
   Back from the straight horizon that ends all one sees.
   Now like a vessel in port
   You unlade your riches unto death,
   And glad are the eager dead to receive you there.
   Let the dead sort
   Your cargo out, breath from breath
   Let them disencumber your bounty, let them all share.
   I imagine dead hands are brighter,
   Their fingers in sunset shine
   With jewels of passion once broken through you as a
   prism
   Breaks light into jewels; and dead breasts whiter
   For your wrath; and yes, I opine
   They anoint their brows with your blood, as a perfect
   chrism.
   On your body, the beaten anvil,
   Was hammered out
   That moon-like sword the ascendant dead unsheathe
   Against us; sword that no man will
   Put to rout;
   Sword that severs the question from us who breathe.
   Surely you’ve trodden straight
   To the very door.
   You have surely achieved your fate;
   And the perfect dead are elate
   To have won once more.
   Now to the dead you are giving
   Your last allegiance.
   But what of us who are living
   And fearful yet of believing
   In your pitiless legions.
   SHADES
   SHALL I tell you, then, how it is? —
   There came a cloven gleam
   Like a tongue of darkened flame
   To flicker in me.
   And so I seem
   To have you still the same
   In one world with me.
   In the flicker of a flower,
   In a worm that is blind, yet strives,
   In a mouse that pauses to listen
   Glimmers our
   Shadow; yet it deprives
   Them none of their glisten.
   In every shaken morsel
   I see our shadow tremble
   As if it rippled from out of us hand in hand.
   As if it were part and parcel,
   One shadow, and we need not dissemble
   Our darkness: do you understand?
   For I have told you plainly how it is.
   BREAD UPON THE WATERS.
   SO you are lost to me!
   Ah you, you ear of corn straight lying,
   What food is this for the darkly flying
   Fowls of the Afterwards!
   White bread afloat on the waters,
   Cast out by the hand that scatters
   Food untowards,
   Will you come back when the tide turns?
   After many days? My heart yearns
   To know.
   Will you return after many days
   To say your say as a traveller says,
   More marvel than woe?
   Drift then, for the sightless birds
   And the fish in shadow-waved herds
   To approach you.
   Drift then, bread cast out;
   Drift, lest I fall in doubt,
   And reproach you.
   For you are lost to me!
   RUINATION
   THE sun is bleeding its fires upon the mist
   That huddles in grey heaps coiling and holding
   back.
   Like cliffs abutting in shadow a drear grey sea
   Some street-ends thrust forward their stack.
   On the misty waste-lands, away from the flushing grey
   Of the morning the elms are loftily dimmed, and tall
   As if moving in air towards us, tall angels
   Of darkness advancing steadily over us all.
   RONDEAU OF A CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR.
   THE hours have tumbled their leaden, mono —
   tonous sands
   And piled them up in a dull grey heap in the
   West.
   I carry my patience sullenly through the waste lands;
   To-morrow will pour them all back, the dull hours I
   detest.
   I force my cart through the sodden filth that is pressed
   Into ooze, and the sombre dirt spouts up at my hands
   As I make my way in twilight now to rest.
   The hours have tumbled their leaden, monotonous
   sands.
   A twisted thorn-tree still in the evening stands
   Defending the memory of leaves and the happy round
   nest.
   But mud has flooded the homes of these weary lands
r />   And piled them up in a dull grey heap in the West.
   All day has the clank of iron on iron distressed
   The nerve-bare place. Now a little silence expands
   And a gasp of relief. But the soul is still compressed:
   I carry my patience sullenly through the waste lands.
   The hours have ceased to fall, and a star commands
   Shadows to cover our stricken manhood, and blest
   Sleep to make us forget: but he understands:
   To-morrow will pour them all back, the dull hours
   I detest.
   TOMMIES IN THE TRAIN
   THE SUN SHINES,
   The coltsfoot flowers along the railway banks
   Shine like flat coin which Jove in thanks
   Strews each side the lines.
   A steeple
   In purple elms, daffodils
   Sparkle beneath; luminous hills
   Beyond — and no people.
   England, Oh Danaë
   To this spring of cosmic gold
   That falls on your lap of mould!
   What then are we?
   What are we
   Clay-coloured, who roll in fatigue
   As the train falls league by league
   From our destiny?
   A hand is over my face,
   A cold hand. I peep between the fingers
   To watch the world that lingers
   Behind, yet keeps pace.
   Always there, as I peep
   Between the fingers that cover my face!
   Which then is it that falls from its place
   And rolls down the steep?
   Is it the train
   That falls like meteorite
   Backward into space, to alight
   Never again?
   Or is it the illusory world
   That falls from reality
   As we look? Or are we
   Like a thunderbolt hurled?
   One or another
   Is lost, since we fall apart
   Endlessly, in one motion depart
   From each other.
   WAR-BABY
   THE CHILD like mustard-seed
   Rolls out of the husk of death
   Into the woman’s fertile, fathomless lap.
   Look, it has taken root!
   See how it flourisheth.
   See how it rises with magical, rosy sap!
   As for our faith, it was there
   When we did not know, did not care;
   It fell from our husk like a little, hasty seed.
   Sing, it is all we need.
   Sing, for the little weed
   Will flourish its branches in heaven when we
   slumber beneath.
   NOSTALGIA
   THE WANING MOON looks upward; this
   grey night
   Slopes round the heavens in one smooth curve
   Of easy sailing; odd red wicks serve
   To show where the ships at sea move out of sight.
   The place is palpable me, for here I was born
   Of this self-same darkness. Yet the shadowy house
   below
   Is out of bounds, and only the old ghosts know
   I have come, I feel them whimper in welcome, and
   mourn.
   My father suddenly died in the harvesting corn
   And the place is no longer ours. Watching, I hear
   No sound from the strangers, the place is dark, and fear
   Opens my eyes till the roots of my vision seems torn.
   Can I go no nearer, never towards the door?
   The ghosts and I we mourn together, and shrink
   In the shadow of the cart-shed. Must we hover on
   the brink
   Forever, and never enter the homestead any more?
   Is it irrevocable? Can I really not go
   Through the open yard-way? Can I not go past the
   sheds
   And through to the mowie? — Only the dead in their
   beds
   Can know the fearful anguish that this is so.
   I kiss the stones, I kiss the moss on the wall,
   And wish I could pass impregnate into the place.
   I wish I could take it all in a last embrace.
   I wish with my breast I here could annihilate it all.
   BIRDS BEASTS AND FLOWERS
   CONTENTS
   FRUITS
   POMEGRANATE
   PEACH
   MEDLARS AND SORB-APPLES
   FIGS
   GRAPES
   THE REVOLUTIONARY
   THE EVENING LAND
   PEACE
   TREES
   CYPRESSES
   BARE FIG-TREES
   BARE ALMOND-TREES
   TROPIC
   SOUTHERN NIGHT
   FLOWERS
   ALMOND BLOSSOM
   PURPLE ANEMONES
   SICILIAN CYCLAMENS
   HIBISCUS AND SALVIA FLOWERS
   THE EVANGELISTIC BEASTS
   ST MATTHEW
   ST MARK
   ST LUKE
   ST JOHN
   CREATURES
   THE MOSQUITO
   FISH
   BAT
   MAN AND BAT
   REPTILES
   SNAKE
   BABY TORTOISE
   TORTOISE SHELL
   TORTOISE FAMILY CONNECTIONS
   LUI ET ELLE
   TORTOISE GALLANTRY
   TORTOISE SHOUT
   BIRDS
   TURKEY-COCK
   HUMMING-BIRD
   EAGLE IN NEW MEXICO
   THE BLUE JAY
   ANIMALS
   THE ASS
   HE-GOAT
   SHE GOAT
   ELEPHANT
   KANGAROO
   BIBBLES
   MOUNTAIN LION
   THE RED WOLF
   GHOSTS
   MEN IN NEW MEXICO
   AUTUMN AT TAOS
   SPIRITS SUMMONED WEST
   THE AMERICAN EAGLE
   The first edition
   FRUITS
   POMEGRANATE
   YOU tell me I am wrong.
   Who are you, who is anybody to tell me I am wrong?
   I am not wrong.
   In Syracuse, rock left bare by the viciousness of Greek
   women.
   No doubt you have forgotten the pomegranate-trees in
   flower,
   Oh so red, and such a lot of them.
   Whereas at Venice
   Abhorrent, green, slippery city
   Whose Doges were old, and had ancient eyes,
   In the dense foliage of the inner garden
   Pomegranates like bright green stone,
   And barbed, barbed with a crown.
   Oh, crown of spiked green metal
   Actually growing!
   Now in Tuscany,
   Pomegranates to warm, your hands at;
   And crowns, kingly, generous, tilting crowns
   Over the left eyebrow.
   And, if you dare, the fissure!
   Do you mean to tell me you will see no fissure?
   Do you prefer to look on the plain side?
   For all that, the setting suns are open.
   The end cracks open with the beginning:
   Rosy, tender, glittering within the fissure.
   Do you mean to tell me there should be no fissure?
   No glittering, compact drops of dawn?
   Do you mean it is wrong, the gold-filmed skin, integument,
   shown ruptured?
   For my part, I prefer my heart to be broken.
   It is so lovely, dawn-kaleidoscopic within the crack.
   San Gervasio in Tuscany.
   PEACH
   WOULD you like to throw a stone at me?
   Here, take all that’s left of my peach.
   Blood-red, deep;
   Heaven knows how it came to pass.
   Somebody’s pound of flesh rendered up.
   Wrinkled with secrets?
   And hard with the intention to keep them.
   Why, from silvery peach
-bloom,
   From that shallow-silvery wine-glass on a short stem
   This rolling, dropping, heavy globule?
   I am thinking, of course, of the peach before I ate it.
   Why so velvety, why so voluptuous heavy?
   Why hanging with such inordinate weight?
   Why so indented?
   Why the groove?
   Why the lovely, bivalve roundnesses?
   Why the ripple down the sphere?
   Why the suggestion of incision?
   Why was not my peach round and finished like a billiard
   ball?
   It would have been if man had made it.
   Though I’ve eaten it now.
   But it wasn’t round and finished like a billiard ball.
   And because I say so, you would like to throw something
   at me.
   Here, you can have my peach stone.
   San Gervasio.
   MEDLARS AND SORB-APPLES
   I LOVE you, rotten,
   Delicious rottenness.
   I love to suck you out from your skins
   So brown and soft and coming suave,
   So morbid, as the Italians say.
   What a rare, powerful, reminiscent flavour
   Comes out of your falling through the stages of decay:
   Stream within stream.
   Something of the same flavour as Syracusan muscat wine
   Or vulgar Marsala.
   Though even the word Marsala will smack of preciosity
   Soon in the pussy-foot West.
   What is it?
   What is it, in the grape turning raisin,
   
 
 Complete Works of D.H. Lawrence (Illustrated) Page 837