Collected Poems

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Collected Poems Page 8

by Adrienne Rich


  Through powdered yellow hair, and would have laughed

  To think that use too mean for art or craft.

  THE WILD SKY

  Here from the corridor of an English train,

  I see the landscape slide through glancing rain,

  A land so personal that every leaf

  Unfolds as if to witness human life,

  And every aging milestone seems to know

  That human hands inscribed it, long ago.

  Oasthouse and garden, narrow bridge and hill—

  Landscape with figures, where a change of style

  Comes softened in a water-colour light

  By Constable; and always, shire on shire,

  The low-pitched sky sags like a tent of air

  Beneath its ancient immaterial weight.

  The weather in these gentle provinces

  Moves like the shift of daylight in a house,

  Subdued by time and custom. Sun and rain

  Are intimate, complaisant to routine,

  Guests in the garden. Year on country year

  Has worn the edge of wildness from this air.

  And I remember that unblunted light

  Poured out all day from a prodigious height—

  My country, where the blue is miles too high

  For minds of men to graze the leaning sky.

  The telegraph may rise or timber fall,

  That last frontier remains, the vertical.

  Men there are beanstalk climbers, all day long

  Haunted by stilts they clattered on when young.

  Giants no longer, now at mortal size

  They stare into that upward wilderness.

  The vertical reminds them what they are,

  And I remember I am native there.

  THE PROSPECT

  You promise me when certain things are done

  We’ll close these rooms above a city square,

  And stealing out by half-light, will be gone

  When next the telephone breaks the waiting air.

  Before they send to find us, we shall be

  Aboard a blunt-nosed steamer, at whose rail

  We’ll watch the loading of the last brown bale

  And feel the channel roughening into sea.

  And after many sunlit days we’ll sight

  The coast you tell me of. Along that shore

  Rare shells lie tumbled, and the seas of light

  Dip past the golden rocks to crash and pour

  Upon the bowl-shaped beach. In that clear bay

  We’ll scoop for pebbles till our feet and hands

  Are gilded by the wash of blending sands;

  And though the boat lift anchor, we shall stay.

  You will discover in the woods beyond

  The creatures you have loved on Chinese silk:

  The shell-gray fox, gazelles that at your sound

  Will lift their eyes as calm as golden milk.

  The leaves and grasses feathered into plumes

  Will shadow-edge their pale calligraphy;

  And in the evening you will come to me

  To tell of honey thick in silver combs.

  Yet in the drift of moments unendeared

  By sameness, when the cracks of morning show

  Only a replica of days we’ve marred

  With still the same old penances to do,

  In furnished rooms above a city square,

  Eating the rind of fact, I sometimes dread

  The promise of that honey-breeding air,

  Those unapportioned clusters overhead.

  EPILOGUE FOR A

  MASQUE OF PURCELL

  Beast and bird must bow aside,

  Grimbald limp into the wings.

  All that’s lovely and absurd,

  All that dances, all that sings

  Folded into trunks again—

  The haunted grove, the starlit air—

  All turns workaday and plain,

  Even the happy, happy pair.

  Harpsichord and trumpet go

  Trundling down the dusty hall.

  That airy joy, that postured woe

  Like the black magician’s spell

  Fall in pieces round us now,

  While the dancer goes to lie

  With the king, and need not know

  He will jilt her by and by.

  We were young once and are old;

  Have seen the dragon die before;

  Knew the innocent and bold,

  Saw them through the cardboard door

  Kiss the guilty and afraid,

  Turning human soon enough.

  We have wept with the betrayed,

  Never known them die for love.

  Yet, since nothing’s done by halves

  While illusion’s yet to do,

  May we still forgive ourselves,

  And dance again when trumpets blow.

  VILLA ADRIANA

  When the colossus of the will’s dominion

  Wavers and shrinks upon a dying eye,

  Enormous shadows sit like birds of prey,

  Waiting to fall where blistered marbles lie.

  But in its open pools the place already

  Lay ruined, before the old king left it free.

  Shattered in waters of each marble basin

  He might have seen it as today we see.

  Dying in discontent, he must have known

  How, once mere consciousness had turned its back,

  The frescoes of his appetite would crumble,

  The fountains of his longing yawn and crack.

  And all his genius would become a riddle,

  His perfect colonnades at last attain

  The incompleteness of a natural thing;

  His impulse turn to mystery again.

  Who sleeps, and dreams, and wakes, and sleeps again

  May dream again; so in the end we come

  Back to the cherished and consuming scene

  As if for once the stones will not be dumb.

  We come like dreamers searching for an answer,

  Passionately in need to reconstruct

  The columned roofs under the blazing sky,

  The courts so open, so forever locked.

  And some of us, as dreamers, excavate

  Under the blanching light of sleep’s high noon,

  The artifacts of thought, the site of love,

  Whose Hadrian has given the slip, and gone.

  THE EXPLORERS

  Beside the Mare Crisium, that sea

  Where water never was, sit down with me,

  And let us talk of Earth, where long ago

  We drank the air and saw the rivers flow

  Like comets through the green estates of man,

  And fruit the colour of Aldebaran

  Weighted the curving boughs. The route of stars

  Was our diversion, and the fate of Mars

  Our grave concern; we stared throughout the night

  On these uncolonized demesnes of light.

  We read of stars escaping Newton’s chain

  Till only autographs of fire remain;

  We aimed our mortal searchlights into space

  As if in hopes to find a mortal face.

  O little Earth, our village, where the day

  Seemed all too brief, and starlight would not stay,

  We were provincials on the grand express

  That whirled us into dark and loneliness.

  We thought to bring you wonder with a tale

  Huger than those that turned our fathers pale.

  Here in this lunar night we watch alone

  Longer than ever men have watched for dawn.

  Beyond this meteor-bitten plain we see

  More starry systems than you dream to be,

  And while their clockwork blazes overhead,

  We speak the names we learned as we were bred,

  We tell of places seen each day from birth—

  Obscure and local, patois of the Earth! />
  O race of farmers, plowing year by year

  The same few fields, I sometimes seem to hear

  The far-off echo of a cattle-bell

  Against the cratered cliff of Arzachel,

  And weep to think no sound can ever come

  Across that outer desert, from my home.

  LANDSCAPE OF THE STAR

  The silence of the year. This hour the streets

  Lie empty, and the clash of bells is scattered

  Out to the edge of stars. I heard them tell

  Morning’s first change and clang the people home

  From crèche and scented aisle. Come home, come home,

  I heard the bells of Christmas call and die.

  This Christmas morning, in the stony streets

  Of an unaccustomed city, where the gas

  Quivers against the darkly-shuttered walls,

  I walk, my breath a veil upon the cold,

  No longer sick for home nor hunted down

  By faces loved, by gate or sill or tree

  That once I used to wreathe in red and silver

  Under the splintered incense of the fir.

  I think of those inscrutables who toiled,

  Heavy and brooding in their camel-train,

  Across the blue-wrapped stretches. Home behind,

  Kingdoms departed from, the solemn journey

  Their only residence: the starlit hour,

  The landscape of the star, their time and place.

  O to be one of them, and feel the sway

  Of rocking camel through the Judaean sand,—

  Ride, wrapped in swathes of damask and of silk,

  Hear the faint ring of jewel in silver mesh

  Starring the silence of the plain; and hold

  With rigid fingers curved as in oblation

  The golden jar of myrrh against the knees.

  To ride thus, bearing gifts to a strange land,

  To a strange King; nor think of fear and envy,

  Being so bemused by starlight of one star,

  The long unbroken journey, that all questions

  Sink like the lesser lights behind the hills;

  Think neither of the end in sight, nor all

  That lies behind, but dreamlessly to ride,

  Traveller at one with travelled countryside.

  How else, since for those Magi and their train

  The palaces behind have ceased to be

  Home, and the home they travel toward is still

  But rumor stoking fear in Herod’s brain?

  What else for them but this, since never more

  Can courts and states receive them as they were,

  Nor have the trampled earth, the roof of straw

  Received the kings as they are yet to be?

  The bells are silent, silenced in my mind

  As on the dark. I walk, a foreigner,

  Upon this night that calls all travellers home,

  The prodigal forgiven, and the breach

  Mended for this one feast. Yet all are strange

  To their own ends, and their beginnings now

  Cannot contain them. Once-familiar speech

  Babbles in wayward dialect of a dream.

  Our gifts shall bring us home: not to beginnings

  Nor always to the destination named

  Upon our setting-forth. Our gifts compel,

  Master our ways and lead us in the end

  Where we are most ourselves; whether at last

  To Solomon’s gaze or Sheba’s silken knees

  Or winter pastures underneath a star,

  Where angels spring like starlight in the trees.

  LETTER FROM THE LAND

  OF SINNERS

  I write you this out of another province

  That you may never see:

  Country of rivers, its topography

  Mutable in detail, yet always one,

  Blasted in certain places, here by glaciers,

  There by the work of man.

  The fishers by the water have no boast

  Save of their freedom; here

  A man may cast a dozen kinds of lure

  And think his days rewarded if he sight

  Now and again the prize, unnetted, flicking

  Its prism-gleams of light.

  The old lord lived secluded in his park

  Until the hall was burned

  Years ago, by his tenants; both have learned

  Better since then, and now our children run

  To greet him. Quail and hunter have forgotten

  The echo of the gun.

  I said there are blasted places: we have kept

  Their nakedness intact—

  No marble to commemorate an act

  Superhuman or merely rash; we know

  Why they are there and why the seed that falls there

  Is certain not to grow.

  We keep these places as we keep the time

  Scarred on our recollection

  When some we loved broke from us in defection,

  Or we ourselves harried to death too soon

  What we could least forgo. Our memories

  Recur like the old moon.

  But we have made another kind of peace,

  And walk where boughs are green,

  Forgiven by the selves that we have been,

  And learning to forgive. Our apples taste

  Sweeter this year; our gates are falling down,

  And need not be replaced.

  CONCORD RIVER

  The turtles on the ledges of July

  Heard our approach and splashed. Now in the mud

  Lie like the memory of fecund summer

  Their buried eggs. The river, colder now,

  Has other, autumn tales to carry on

  Between the banks where lovers used to lie.

  Lovers, or boys escaped from yard and farm

  To drown in sensual purities of sun—

  No matter which; for single fisherman

  Casting into the shade, or those absorbed

  In human ardor, summer was the same,

  Impervious to weariness or alarm.

  The fisherman, by craft and love removed

  From meanness, has an almanac at home

  Saying the season will be brief this year

  And ice strike early; yet upon its shelf

  The book is no despoiler of this day

  In which he moves and ponders, most himself.

  That boy, watching for turtles by the shore,

  Steeped in his satisfactory loneliness,

  If asked could tell us that the sun would set,

  Or autumn drive him back to games and school—

  Tell us at second-hand, believing then

  Only midsummer and the noonstruck pool.

  And we, who floated through the sunlit green,

  Indolent, voluntary as the dance

  Of dragon-flies above the skimming leaves—

  For us the landscape and the hour became

  A single element, where our drifting silence

  Fell twofold, like our shadows on the water.

  This is the Concord River, where the ice

  Will hold till April: this is the willowed stream

  Much threaded by the native cogitators

  Who wrote their journals calmly by its shore,

  Observing weather and the swing of seasons

  Along with personal cosmologies.

  Henry Thoreau most nearly learned to live

  Within a world his soul could recognize—

  Unshaken by accounts of any country

  He could not touch with both his hands. He saw

  The river moving past the provincial town

  And knew each curve of shoreline for his own.

  He travelled much, he said—his wayward speech

  Sounding always a little insolent,

  Yet surer than the rest; they, like ourselves,

  Ran off to dabble in a world beyond,

&nbs
p; While he exalted the geography

  He lived each day: a river and a pond.

  For him there was no turning of the ear

  To rumored urgencies that sought to rouse

  The fisher from his pool, the serious child

  From his unconscious wandering: the sound

  Of desperate enterprises rang to him

  Fictive as ghosts upon old Indian ground.

  Lover and child and fisherman, alike

  Have in their time been native to this shore

  As he would have it peopled: all entranced

  By such concerns in their perfected hour

  That in their lives the river and the tree

  Are absolutes, no longer scenery.

  APOLOGY

  You, invincibly yourself,

  Have nothing left to say.

  The stones upon the mountainside

  Are not more free,

  Bearing all question, all reproach

  Without reply.

  The dead, who keep their peace intact,

  Although they know

  Much we might be gainers by,

  Are proud like you—

  Or, if they spoke, might sound as you

  Sounded just now.

  For every angry, simple man

  The word is but

  A shadow, and his motive grows

  More still and great

  While the world hums around him, wild

  That he should explicate.

  And Socrates, whose crystal tongue

  Perturbs us now,

  Left all unsatisfied; the word

  Can never show

  Reason enough for what a man

  Knows he must do.

  You told us little, and are done.

  So might the dead

  Begin to speak of dying, then

  Leave half unsaid.

  Silence like thunder bears its own

  Excuse for dread.

  LIVING IN SIN

  She had thought the studio would keep itself;

 

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