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Collected Poems 1945-1990

Page 12

by R. S. Thomas


  Balance, letting her sway

  To her cost. The lips’ prose

  Ticked on, regulating

  Her voltage.

  Such insulation!

  But necessary; their flair

  For some small fun with

  The current being

  An injustice.

  It is the man burns.

  The Priest

  The priest picks his way

  Through the parish. Eyes watch him

  From windows, from the farms;

  Hearts wanting him to come near.

  The flesh rejects him.

  Women, pouring from the black kettle,

  Stir up the whirling tea-grounds

  Of their thoughts; offer him a dark

  Filling in their smiling sandwich.

  Priests have a long way to go.

  The people wait for them to come

  To them over the broken glass

  Of their vows, making them pay

  With their sweat’s coinage for their correction.

  He goes up a green lane

  Through growing birches; lambs cushion

  His vision. He comes slowly down

  In the dark, feeling the cross warp

  In his hands; hanging on it his thought’s icicles.

  ‘Crippled soul,’ do you say? looking at him

  From the mind’s height; ‘limping through life

  On his prayers. There are other people

  In the world, sitting at table

  Contented, though the broken body

  And the shed blood are not on the menu.’

  ‘Let it be so,’ I say. ‘Amen and amen.’

  Welcome to Wales

  Come to Wales

  To be buried; the undertaker

  Will arrange it for you. We have

  The sites and a long line

  Of clients going back

  To the first milkman who watered

  His honour. How they endow

  Our country with their polished

  Memorials! No one lives

  In our villages, but they dream

  Of returning from the rigours

  Of the pound’s climate. Why not

  Try it? We can always raise

  Some mourners, and the amens

  Are ready. This is what

  Chapels are for; their varnish

  Wears well and will go

  With most coffins. Let us

  Quote you; our terms

  Are the lowest, and we offer,

  Dirt cheap, a place where

  It is lovely to lie.

  Loyalties

  The prince walks upon the carpet

  Our hearts have unrolled

  For him; a worn carpet,

  I fear. We are a poor

  People; we should have saved up

  For this; these rents, these blood stains,

  This erosion of the edges

  Of it, do him no honour.

  And where does it lead to

  Anyway? About the table

  The shopkeepers are all attention.

  I would have run it to the door

  Of the holding where Puw lived

  Once, wrapping the language

  About him, watching the trickle

  Of his children down the hill’s side.

  Kneeling

  Moments of great calm,

  Kneeling before an altar

  Of wood in a stone church

  In summer, waiting for the God

  To speak; the air a staircase

  For silence; the sun’s light

  Ringing me, as though I acted

  A great rôle. And the audiences

  Still; all that close throng

  Of spirits waiting, as I,

  For the message.

  Prompt me, God;

  But not yet. When I speak,

  Though it be you who speak

  Through me, something is lost.

  The meaning is in the waiting.

  Tenancies

  This is pain’s landscape.

  A savage agriculture is practised

  Here; every farm has its

  Grandfather or grandmother, gnarled hands

  On the cheque-book, a long, slow

  Pull on the placenta about the neck.

  Old lips monopolise the talk

  When a friend calls. The children listen

  From the kitchen; the children march

  With angry patience against the dawn.

  They are waiting for someone to die

  Whose name is as bitter as the soil

  They handle. In clear pools

  In the furrows they watch themselves grow old

  To the terrible accompaniment of the song

  Of the blackbird, that promises them love.

  Art History

  They made the grey stone

  Blossom, setting it on a branch

  Of the mind; airy cathedrals

  Grew, trembling at the tip

  Of their breathing; delicate palaces

  Hung motionless in the gold,

  Unbelievable sunrise. They praised

  With rapt forms such as the blind hand

  Dreamed, journeying to its sad

  Nuptials. We come too late

  On the scene, pelted with the stone

  Flowers’ bitter confetti.

  The Small Window

  In Wales there are jewels

  To gather, but with the eye

  Only. A hill lights up

  Suddenly; a field trembles

  With colour and goes out

  In its turn; in one day

  You can witness the extent

  Of the spectrum and grow rich

  With looking. Have a care;

  This wealth is for the few

  And chosen. Those who crowd

  A small window dirty it

  With their breathing, though sublime

  And inexhaustible the view.

  They

  I take their hands,

  Hard hands. There is no love

  For such, only a willed

  Gentleness. Negligible men

  From the village, from the small

  Holdings, they bring their grief

  Sullenly to my back door,

  And are speechless. Seeing them

  In the wind with the light’s

  Halo, watching their eyes

  Blur, I know the reason

  They cry, their worsting

  By one whom they will fight.

  Daily the sky mirrors

  The water, the water the

  Sky. Daily I take their side

  In their quarrel, calling their faults

  Mine. How do I serve so

  This being they have shut out

  Of their houses, their thoughts, their lives?

  Burgos

  Nightingales crackled in the frost

  At Burgos. The day dawned fiercely

  On the parched land, on the fields to the east

  Of the city, bitter with sage

  And thistle. Lonely bells called

  From the villages; no one answered

  Them but the sad priests, fingering

  Their beads, praying for the lost people

  Of the soil. Everywhere were the slow

  Donkeys, carrying silent men

  To the mesa to reap their bundles

  Of dried grass. In the air an eagle

  Circled, shadowless as the God

  Who made that country and drinks its blood.

  Study

  The flies walk upon the roof top.

  The student’s eyes are too keen

  To miss them. The young girls walk

  In the roadway; the wind ruffles

  Their skirts. The student does not look.

  He sees only the flies spread their wings

  And take off into the sunlight

  Without sound. There is nothing to do

  Now but read in his bo
ok

  Of how young girls walked in the roadway

  In Tyre, and how young men

  Sailed off into the red west

  For gold, writing dry words

  To the music the girls sang.

  That

  It will always win.

  Other men will come as I have

  To stand here and beat upon it

  As on a door, and ask for love,

  For compassion, for hatred even; for anything

  Rather than this blank indifference,

  Than the neutrality of its answers, if they can be called, answers

  These grey skies, these wet fields,

  With the wind’s winding-sheet upon them.

  And endlessly the days go on

  With their business. Lovers make their appearance

  And vanish. The germ finds its way

  From the grass to the snail to the liver to the grass.

  The shadow of the tree falls

  On our acres like a crucifixion,

  With a bird singing in the branches

  What its shrill species has always sung,

  Hammering its notes home

  One by one into our brief flesh.

  The Place

  Summer is here.

  Once more the house has its

  Spray of martins, Proust’s fountain

  Of small birds, whose light shadows

  Come and go in the sunshine

  Of the lawn as thoughts do

  In the mind. Watching them fly

  Is my business, not as a man vowed

  To science, who counts their returns

  To the rafters, or sifts their droppings

  For facts, recording the wave-length

  Of their screaming; my method is so

  To have them about myself

  Through the hours of this brief

  Season and to fill with their

  Movement, that it is I they build

  In and bring up their young

  To return to after the bitter

  Migrations, knowing the site

  Inviolate through its outward changes.

  Once

  God looked at space and I appeared,

  Rubbing my eyes at what I saw.

  The earth smoked, no birds sang;

  There were no footprints on the beaches

  Of the hot sea, no creatures in it.

  God spoke. I hid myself in the side

  Of the mountain.

  As though born again

  I stepped out into the cool dew,

  Trying to remember the fire sermon,

  Astonished at the mingled chorus

  Of weeds and flowers. In the brown bark

  Of the trees I saw the many faces

  Of life, forms hungry for birth,

  Mouthing at me. I held my way

  To the light, inspecting my shadow

  Boldly; and in the late morning

  You, rising towards me out of the depths

  Of myself. I took your hand,

  Remembering you, and together,

  Confederates of the natural day,

  We went forth to meet the Machine.

  Petition

  And I standing in the shade

  Have seen it a thousand times

  Happen: first theft, then murder;

  Rape; the rueful acts

  Of the blind hand. I have said

  New prayers, or said the old

  In a new way. Seeking the poem

  In the pain, I have learned

  Silence is best, paying for it

  With my conscience. I am eyes

  Merely, witnessing virtue’s

  Defeat; seeing the young born

  Fair, knowing the cancer

  Awaits them. One thing I have asked

  Of the disposer of the issues

  Of life: that truth should defer

  To beauty. It was not granted.

  This One

  Oh, I know it: the long story,

  The ecstasies, the mutilations;

  Crazed, pitiable creatures

  Imagining themselves a Napoleon,

  A Jesus; letting their hair grow,

  Shaving it off; gorging themselves

  On a dream; kindling

  A new truth, withering by it.

  While patiently this poor farmer

  Purged himself in his strong sweat,

  Ploughing under the tall boughs

  Of the tree of the knowledge of

  Good and evil, watching its fruit

  Ripen, abstaining from it.

  Echoes

  What is this? said God. The obstinacy

  Of its refusal to answer

  Enraged him. He struck it

  Those great blows it resounds

  With still. It glowered at

  Him, but remained dumb,

  Turning on its slow axis

  Of pain, reflecting the year

  In its seasons. Nature bandaged

  Its wounds. Healing in

  The smooth sun, it became

  Fair. God looked at it

  Again, reminded of

  An intention. They shall answer

  For you, he said. And at once

  There were trees with birds

  Singing, and through the trees

  Animals wandered, drinking

  Their own scent, conceding

  An absence. Where are you?

  He called, and riding the echo

  The shapes came, slender

  As trees, but with white hands,

  Curious to build. On the altars

  They made him the red blood

  Told what he wished to hear.

  Invitation

  And one voice says: Come

  Back to the rain and manure

  Of Siloh, to the small talk,

  Of the wind, and the chapel’s

  Temptation; to the pale,

  Sickly half-smile of

  The daughter of the village

  Grocer. The other says: Come

  To the streets, where the pound

  Sings and the doors open

  To its music, with life

  Like an express train running

  To time. And I stay

  Here, listening to them, blowing

  On the small soul in my

  Keeping with such breath as I have.

  Period

  It was a time when wise men

  Were not silent, but stifled

  By vast noise. They took refuge

  In books that were not read.

  Two counsellors had the ear

  Of the public. One cried ‘Buy’

  Day and night, and the other,

  More plausibly, ‘Sell your repose.’

  No Answer

  But the chemicals in

  My mind were not

  Ready, so I let

  Him go on, dissolving

  The word on my

  Tongue. Friend, I had said,

  Life is too short for

  Religion; it takes time

  To prepare a sacrifice

  For the God. Give yourself

  To science that reveals

  All, asking no pay

  For it. Knowledge is power;

  The old oracle

  Has not changed. The nucleus

  In the atom awaits

  Our bidding. Come forth,

  We cry, and the dust spreads

  Its carpet. Over the creeds

  And masterpieces our wheels go.

  Song

  I choose white, but with

  Red on it, like the snow

  In winter with its few

  Holly berries and the one

  Robin, that is a fire

  To warm by and like Christ

  Comes to us in his weakness,

  But with a sharp song.

  The Epitaph

  You ask me what it was like?

  I lived, thought, felt the temptation

&nbs
p; Of spirit to take matter

  As my invention, but bruised my mind

  On the facts: the old stubbornness

  Of rock, the rough bark of a tree,

  The body of her I would make my own

  And could not.

  And yet they ceased;

  With the closing of my eyes they became

  As nothing. Each day I had to begin

  Their assembly, as though it were I

  Who contrived them. The air was contentment

  Of spirit, a glass to renew

  One’s illusions. Christen me, christen me,

  The stone cried. Instead I bequeathed

  It these words, foreseeing the forming

  Of the rainbow of your brushed eyes

  After the storm in my flesh.

  Digest

  Mostly it was wars

  With their justification

  Of the surrender of values

  For which they fought. Between

  Them they laid their plans

  For the next, exempted

  From compact by the machine’s

  Exigencies. Silence

  Was out of date; wisdom consisted

  In a revision of the strict code

  Of the spirit. To keep moving

  Was best; to bring the arrival

  Nearer departure; to synchronise

  The applause, as the public images

  Stepped on and off the stationary

  Aircraft. The labour of the years

  Was over; the children were heirs

  To an instant existence. They fed the machine

  Their questions, knowing the answers

  Already, unable to apply them.

  Acting

  Being unwise enough to have married her

  I never knew when she was not acting.

  ‘I love you’ she would say; I heard the audiences

  Sigh. ‘I hate you’; I could never be sure

  They were still there. She was lovely. I

  Was only the looking-glass she made up in.

  I husbanded the rippling meadow

  Of her body. Their eyes grazed nightly upon it.

  Alone now on the brittle platform

  Of herself she is playing her last rôle.

  It is perfect. Never in all her career

  Was she so good. And yet the curtain

  Has fallen. My charmer, come out from behind

  It to take the applause. Look, I am clapping too.

 

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