Narrative Poems

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Narrative Poems Page 7

by C. S. Lewis


  6

  And after this night comes another night

  —Night after night until the worst of all.

  And now too even the noonday and the light

  Let through the horrors. Oh, could he recall

  The deep sleep and the dreams that used to fall

  Around him for the asking! But, somehow,

  Something’s amiss . . . sleep comes so rarely now.

  7

  Then, like the dog returning to its vomit,

  He staggered to the bookcase to renew

  Yet once again the taint he had taken from it,

  And shuddered as he went. But horror drew

  His feet, as joy draws others. There in view

  Was his strange heaven and his far stranger hell,

  His secret lust, his soul’s dark citadel:—

  8

  Old Theomagia, Demonology,

  Cabbala, Chemic Magic, Book of the Dead,

  Damning Hermetic rolls that none may see

  Save the already damned—such grubs are bred

  From minds that lose the Spirit and seek instead

  For spirits in the dust of dead men’s error,

  Buying the joys of dream with dreamland terror.

  9

  This lost soul looked them over one and all,

  Now sickening at the heart’s root; for he knew

  This night was one of those when he would fall

  And scream alone (such things they made him do)

  And roll upon the floor. The madness grew

  Wild at his breast, but still his brain was clear

  That he could watch the moment coming near.

  10

  But, ere it came, he heard a sound, half groan,

  Half muttering, from the table. Like a child

  Caught unawares that thought it was alone,

  He started as in guilt. His gaze was wild,

  Yet pitiably with all his will he smiled,

  —So strong is shame, even then. And Dymer stirred,

  Now waking, and looked up and spoke one word:

  11

  ‘Water!’ he said. He was too dazed to see

  What hell-wrung face looked down, what shaking hand

  Poured out the draught. He drank it thirstily

  And held the glass for more. ‘Your land . . . your land

  Of dreams,’ he said. ‘All lies! . . . I understand

  More than I did. Yes, water. I’ve the thirst

  Of hell itself. Your magic’s all accursed.’

  12

  When he had drunk again he rose and stood,

  Pallid and cold with sleep. ‘By God,’ he said,

  ‘You did me wrong to send me to that wood.

  I sought a living spirit and found instead

  Bogies and wraiths.’ The Master raised his head,

  Calm as a sage, and answered, ‘Are you mad?

  Come, sit you down. Tell me what dream you had.’

  13

  —‘I dreamed about a wood . . . an autumn red

  Of beech-trees big as mountains. Down between—

  The first thing that I saw—a clearing spread,

  Deep down, oh, very deep. Like some ravine

  Or like a well it sank, that forest green

  Under its weight of forest—more remote

  Than one ship in a landlocked sea afloat.

  14

  ‘Then through the narrowed sky some heavy bird

  Would flap its way, a stillness more profound

  Following its languid wings. Sometimes I heard

  Far off in the long woods with quiet sound

  The sudden chestnut thumping to the ground,

  Or the dry leaf that drifted past upon

  Its endless loiter earthward and was gone.

  15

  ‘Then next . . . I heard twigs splintering on my right

  And rustling in the thickets. Turning there

  I watched. Out of the foliage came in sight

  The head and blundering shoulders of a bear,

  Glistening in sable black, with beady stare

  Of eyes towards me, and no room to fly

  —But padding soft and slow the beast came by.

  16

  ‘And—mark their flattery—stood and rubbed his flank

  Against me. On my shaken legs I felt

  His heart beat. And my hand that stroked him sank

  Wrist-deep upon his shoulder in soft pelt.

  Yes . . . and across my spirit as I smelt

  The wild thing’s scent, a new, sweet wildness ran

  Whispering of Eden-fields long lost by man.

  17

  ‘So far was well. But then came emerald birds

  Singing about my head. I took my way

  Sauntering the cloistered woods. Then came the herds,

  The roebuck and the fallow deer at play,

  Trooping to nose my hand. All this, you say,

  Was sweet? Oh, sweet! . . . do you think I could not see

  That beasts and wood were nothing else but me?

  18

  ‘. . . That I was making everything I saw,

  Too sweet, far too well fitted to desire

  To be a living thing? Those forests draw

  No sap from the kind earth: the solar fire

  And soft rain feed them not: that fairy brier

  Pricks not: the birds sing sweetly in that brake

  Not for their own delight but for my sake!

  19

  ‘It is a world of sad, cold, heartless stuff,

  Like a bought smile, no joy in it.’—‘But stay;

  Did you not find your lady?’—‘Sure enough!

  I still had hopes till then. The autumn day

  Was westering, the long shadows crossed my way,

  When over daisies folded for the night

  Beneath rook-gathering elms she came in sight.’

  20

  —‘Was she not fair?’—‘So beautiful, she seemed

  Almost a living soul. But every part

  Was what I made it—all that I had dreamed—

  No more, no less: the mirror of my heart,

  Such things as boyhood feigns beneath the smart

  Of solitude and spring. I was deceived

  Almost. In that first moment I believed.

  21

  ‘For a big, brooding rapture, tense as fire

  And calm as a first sleep, had soaked me through

  Without thought, without word, without desire . . .

  Meanwhile above our heads the deepening blue

  Burnished the gathering stars. Her sweetness drew

  A veil before my eyes. The minutes passed

  Heavy like loaded vines. She spoke at last.

  22

  ‘She said, for this land only did men love

  The shadow-lands of earth. All our disease

  Of longing, all the hopes we fabled of,

  Fortunate islands or Hesperian seas

  Or woods beyond the West, were but the breeze

  That blew from off those shores: one far, spent breath

  That reached even to the world of change and death.

  23

  ‘She told me I had journeyed home at last

  Into the golden age and the good countrie

  That had been always there. She bade me cast

  My cares behind forever:—on her knee

  Worshipped me, lord and love—oh, I can see

  Her red lips even now! Is it not wrong

  That men’s delusions should be made so strong?

  24

  ‘For listen, I was so besotted now

  She made me think that I was somehow seeing

  The very core of truth . . . I felt somehow,

  Beyond all veils, the inward pulse of being.

  Thought was enslaved, but oh, it felt like freeing

  And draughts of larger air. It is too much!

  Who can come through untainted from tha
t touch?

  25

  ‘There I was nearly wrecked. But mark the rest:

  She went too fast. Soft to my arms she came.

  The robe slipped from her shoulder. The smooth breast

  Was bare against my own. She shone like flame

  Before me in the dusk, all love, all shame—

  Faugh!—and it was myself. But all was well,

  For, at the least, that moment snapped the spell.

  26

  ‘As when you light a candle, the great gloom

  Which was the unbounded night, sinks down, compressed

  To four white walls in one familiar room,

  So the vague joy shrank wilted in my breast

  And narrowed to one point, unmasked, confessed;

  Fool’s paradise was gone: instead was there

  King Lust with his black, sudden, serious stare.

  27

  ‘That moment in a cloud among the trees

  Wild music and the glare of torches came.

  On sweated faces, on the prancing knees

  Of shaggy satyrs fell the smoky flame,

  On ape and goat and crawlers without name,

  On rolling breast, black eyes and tossing hair,

  On old bald-headed witches, lean and bare.

  28

  ‘They beat the devilish tom-tom rub-a-dub;

  Lunging, leaping, in unwieldy romp,

  Singing Cotytto and Beelzebub,

  With devil-dancers’ mask and phallic pomp,

  Torn raw with briers and caked from many a swamp,

  They came, among the wild flowers dripping blood

  And churning the green mosses into mud.

  29

  ‘They sang, “Return! Return! We are the lust

  That was before the world and still shall be

  When your last law is trampled into dust,

  We are the mother swamp, the primal sea

  Whence the dry land appeared. Old, old are we.

  It is but a return . . . it’s nothing new,

  Easy as slipping on a well-worn shoe.”

  30

  ‘And then there came warm mouths and finger-tips

  Preying upon me, whence I could not see,

  Then . . . a huge face, low-browed, with swollen lips

  Crooning, “I am not beautiful as she,

  But I’m the older love; you shall love me

  Far more than Beauty’s self. You have been ours

  Always. We are the world’s most ancient powers.”

  31

  ‘First flatterer and then bogy—like a dream!

  Sir, are you listening? Do you also know

  How close to the soft laughter comes the scream

  Down yonder?’ But his host cried sharply, ‘No.

  Leave me alone. Why will you plague me? Go!

  Out of my house! Begone!’—‘With all my heart,’

  Said Dymer. ‘But one word before we part.’

  32

  He paused, and in his cheek the anger burned:

  Then turning to the table, he poured out

  More water. But before he drank he turned—

  Then leaped back to the window with a shout

  For there—it was no dream—beyond all doubt

  He saw the Master crouch with levelled gun,

  Cackling in maniac voice, ‘Run, Dymer, run!’

  33

  He ducked and sprang far out. The starless night

  On the wet lawn closed round him every way.

  Then came the gun-crack and the splash of light

  Vanished as soon as seen. Cool garden clay

  Slid from his feet. He had fallen and he lay

  Face downward among leaves—then up and on

  Through branch and leaf till sense and breath were gone.

  CANTO VIII

  1

  When next he found himself no house was there,

  No garden and great trees. Beside a lane

  In grass he lay. Now first he was aware

  That, all one side, his body glowed with pain:

  And the next moment and the next again

  Was neither less nor more. Without a pause

  It clung like a great beast with fastened claws;

  2

  That for a time he could not frame a thought

  Nor know himself for self, nor pain for pain,

  Till moment added on to moment taught

  The new, strange art of living on that plane,

  Taught how the grappled soul must still remain,

  Still choose and think and understand beneath

  The very grinding of the ogre’s teeth.

  3

  He heard the wind along the hedges sweep,

  The quarter striking from a neighbouring tower.

  About him was the weight of the world’s sleep;

  Within, the thundering pain. That quiet hour

  Heeded it not. It throbbed, it raged with power

  Fit to convulse the heavens: and at his side

  The soft peace drenched the meadows far and wide.

  4

  The air was cold, the earth was cold with dew,

  The hedge behind him dark as ink. But now

  The clouds broke and a paler heaven showed through

  Spacious with sudden stars, breathing somehow

  The sense of change to slumbering lands. A cow

  Coughed in the fields behind. The puddles showed

  Like pools of sky amid the darker road.

  5

  And he could see his own limbs faintly white

  And the blood black upon them. Then by chance

  He turned . . . and it was strange: there at his right

  He saw a woman standing, and her glance

  Met his: and at the meeting his deep trance

  Changed not, and while he looked the knowledge grew

  She was not of the old life but the new.

  6

  ‘Who is it?’ he said. ‘The loved one, the long lost.’

  He stared upon her. ‘Truly?’—‘Truly indeed.’

  —‘Oh, lady, you come late. I am tempest-tossed,

  Broken and wrecked. I am dying. Look, I bleed.

  Why have you left me thus and given no heed

  To all my prayers?—left me to be the game

  Of all deceits?’—‘You should have asked my name.’

  7

  —‘What are you, then?’ But to his sudden cry

  She did not answer. When he had thought awhile

  He said: ‘How can I tell it is no lie?

  It may be one more phantom to beguile

  The brain-sick dreamer with its harlot smile.’

  ‘I have not smiled,’ she said. The neighbouring bell

  Tolled out another quarter. Silence fell.

  8

  And after a long pause he spoke again:

  ‘Leave me,’ he said. ‘Why do you watch with me?

  You do not love me. Human tears and pain

  And hoping for the things that cannot be,

  And blundering in the night where none can see,

  And courage with cold back against the wall,

  You do not understand.’—‘I know them all.

  9

  ‘The gods themselves know pain, the eternal forms.

  In realms beyond the reach of cloud, and skies

  Nearest the ends of air, where come no storms

  Nor sound of earth, I have looked into their eyes

  Peaceful and filled with pain beyond surmise,

  Filled with an ancient woe man cannot reach

  One moment though in fire; yet calm their speech.’

  10

  ‘Then these,’ said Dymer, ‘were the world I wooed . . .

  These were the holiness of flowers and grass

  And desolate dews . . . these, the eternal mood

  Blowing the eternal theme through men that pass.

  I called myself their lover—I that was
>
  Less fit for that long service than the least

  Dull, workday drudge of men or faithful beast.

  11

  ‘Why do they lure to them such spirits as mine,

  The weak, the passionate, and the fool of dreams?

  When better men go safe and never pine

  With whisperings at the heart, soul-sickening gleams

  Of infinite desire, and joy that seems

  The promise of full power? For it was they,

  The gods themselves, that led me on this way.

  12

  ‘Give me the truth! I ask not now for pity.

  When gods call, can the following them be sin?

  Was it false light that lured me from the City?

  Where was the path—without it or within?

  Must it be one blind throw to lose or win?

  Has heaven no voice to help? Must things of dust

  Guess their own way in the dark?’ She said, ‘They must.’

  13

  Another silence: then he cried in wrath,

  ‘You came in human shape, in sweet disguise

  Wooing me, lurking for me in my path,

  Hid your eternal cold with woman’s eyes,

  Snared me with shows of love—and all was lies.’

  She answered, ‘For our kind must come to all

  If bidden, but in the shape for which they call.’

  14

  ‘What!’ answered Dymer. ‘Do you change and sway

  To serve us, as the obedient planets spin

  About the sun? Are you but potter’s clay

  For us to mould—unholy to our sin

  And holy to the holiness within?’

  She said, ‘Waves fall on many an unclean shore,

  Yet the salt seas are holy as before.

  15

  ‘Our nature is no purer for the saint

  That worships, nor from him that uses ill

  Our beauty can we suffer any taint.

  As from the first we were, so are we still:

  With incorruptibles the mortal will

  Corrupts itself, and clouded eyes will make

  Darkness within from beams they cannot take.’

  16

  ‘Well . . . it is well,’ said Dymer. ‘If I have used

  The embreathing spirit amiss . . . what would have been

  The strength of all my days I have refused

  And plucked the stalk, too hasty, in the green,

  Trusted the good for best, and having seen

  Half-beauty, or beauty’s fringe, the lowest stair,

  The common incantation, worshipped there.’

  17

  But presently he cried in his great pain,

  ‘If I had loved a beast it would repay,

  But I have loved the Spirit and loved in vain.

  Now let me die . . . ah, but before the way

  Is ended quite, in the last hour of day,

  Is there no word of comfort, no one kiss

  Of human love? Does it all end in this?’

 

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