New Collected Poems

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New Collected Poems Page 13

by David Gascoyne


  From the tower of a quietly blazing mansion whirled a flock of doves, and the smell of their half-scorched feathers became confused with the scent of the countless damp and trampled plants that lay a-rotting on the terraces. And the sky flung a column of wind like a wide-flung scarf into the distance, where the earth was turning on its never-ending hinge.

  p. 1937

  TRANSPARENCY OF THE VEGETABLE WORLD SEEN FROM THREE PACES AWAY BY THE THREE FACES OF A FACTORY

  then fawn is in the litigation of its repeatable tower

  which is as clear as malt the spider of the glass dance

  the dangerous glass dance of domes surmounted by smiles

  and branching out towards the suns of oval fame

  in tubes of nacre and of lipsalved iron

  importunate as doves

  but even the colossal egresses could not contend

  with the stone bed of the marriage settlement

  the stone bed in which the fiery boa lowered its hood in

  order to see through the rent in the ceiling

  through which poured the Thames

  bastard is the thin imagery of the rickshaw’s cotton-wool

  eyebath

  it goes backwards and forwards like a dog

  trying to unwind the binding of its malefic tail

  and only succeeding in awakening the chorus of the buckets

  in the yard of the hotel

  where the flies which wear stays have burnt holes in

  all the mangled heaps of spontaneous

  combustion which so magnificently attains the summit of

  the green yawning-mixture

  the grey hoops of method and mild liturgy

  the little soiled eggs which inhabit the hairdresser’s mouth

  in the jug’s pierced heart the beehive is burning like a sceptre

  and the vine-covered wall is enjoying the Princess’s foot

  while the intermission regains the frequent equilibrium between

  spraying the thorny surface of the vision with the

  wild trace of a thousand confusions and a thousand

  interplanetary speedboats’ echoes

  and the gloved shock of a woven light-wave’s path

  through the thicket of a swan’s coiled neck

  before the day breaks upon China and removes the other swans

  from their vapour-baths and holds them upside down above

  the mountains

  meanwhile the antipodes of the crystal break down into their

  respective elements

  which are

  the night of the log palace

  the calm of the medusa’s hair-net

  the beetle of the western plains which breaks the lock of

  rockplants’ wings

  the flame-coloured fruit surmounting the debris of the necrophological ruin of Christ

  the sap in the sex of the brain

  and the beast with two toes whose music is like that

  of the slow turning of eyes from side to side in the

  great wind which blows out of the empty mansions on

  the tops of the hills

  the great wind which will blow down the last of the gallows of pride.

  w. 1937–38, p. 1996

  PHANTASMAGORIA

  For Margaret W.

  The wind has stopped at last

  in that little black town on the edge of a violet sea

  where a man in an upstairs-room of the empty house

  which stands overlooking the yard of the Sodium Works

  is sitting blindfold on the draughty floor

  trying to hear the feeble groans of the North Pole inside his skull

  and thinking of the iron teeth of Death

  thinking of the rusty police-whistle chained to so many necks

  of the last Act of Faust

  of the cherry-coloured gown his mistress wore on that fatal night when she lost her head so irretrievably while sailing in a gondola

  and of the incomparably curvilinear and seductive effect to be obtained

  by writing one’s name in water

  with the white of one’s own glass eye …

  In this poor blackened town on the edge of a violet sea

  the wind has left stray locks of hair behind

  in almost every street –

  locks which appear like loosely-knotted strands of twilight sleep

  or fragments of Opal-tree bark

  preserved in wine

  and left all night to dry upon the steps of a Russian church …

  These scattered tresses make the passers-by turn pale

  then hurry home to disinfect their wells

  They glitter faintly like the dust of poisoned stars

  and hypnotize the gaze of the last birds still to remain

  in that seaside town as black as a burnt cake

  where the dead are sitting propped-up in the windows robed in flags

  of all the nations – where the homeless night

  is kept awake by Autumn’s chill aurora in the sky

  and silence lolls like smoke along the disused harbour-quays …

  And in this little town like a charred bun beside a sea

  which stains its shores with blackberry-juice ink

  the crowds continue playing their quaint melancholy games

  in street and market-place although dense clouds of smoke

  are pouring from the windows of the Luxury Hotel

  in which the foreign guest in Room 13

  swathed in red bandages from head to foot

  lies thinking of the monkey’s-paw of Death

  thinking of the frozen music in the eyes of statues

  of the brutal naked beauty of a surgical machine

  of his father’s raincoat gleaming in the twilight long ago

  and of the fungus growing on the tree-trunk of Desire …

  In that charcoal-black town on the edge of a vein-coloured sea

  where shadow smoulders in the cave-like shops

  and copper bells toll slowly all day long

  the wheels of a great lacquered Rolls-Royce car

  left lying in the middle of the main street upside-down

  are to be seen months later still continuing to spin

  in the tensely sensational glare of the naphtha torch

  left burning there by the authorities to mark the fatal spot –

  continuing still to spin like a soul in pain

  like a tin-plate sent whirling out without a word through the window-bars of a condemned man’s cell

  or like the breasts of Destiny revolving night and day …

  And now that the day’s white wind has stopped at last

  the hoofs of dusk go trampling through the hollow clouds on high

  from beneath their rocks the scorpions of the darkness soon creep out

  and faintly in the distance on all sides is to be heard

  the dread hyena-laughter of the prehistoric Night …

  Meanwhile through narrow twilit streets flock jostling throngs of masks –

  red oblong leather faces stuck with clusters of tiny shells

  faces of cheese with green protruding fangs

  faces like pillows wet with tears and moulting feathers through the torn holes of their eyes

  and snarling hairy faces like the hindquarters of apes

  and sickly faces weak as greasy smudges left by flies

  and hungry faces gaping like raw muddy graves in Spring …

  The thoroughfares of Evening swarm with rapid shifting scenes

  and everywhere the lamps of lust and terror thrust their beams

  to scour the countless cage-like haunts of men with scorching light

  while waves of sound roll out across the rooftops overhead –

  waves swollen with dreamy cries and rumbling words

  with the last thick sobs of harlots stabbed to death

  and with that unbearably heart-rending melody which the blind old men who
live alone in freezing garrets are forever playing to themselves upon their broken violins …

  See! here is a ring of dancers round a blazing marriage-bed

  and here is a bunch of bearded dwarfs dangling chained by their heels from the top of a convent-wall

  and here are the bones of a Saint which calmly float

  upon the silken surface of a swimming-pool hewn from the heart of an amethyst-rock

  in a glass-panelled coffin of cork lit-up inside on the stroke of midnight by a magnesium-flare …

  Here is the Theatre standing open to the sky

  in which dead flowers and moonlight perform ballets once an hour

  and there the Children’s Home stands on the hill behind the town

  where hidden in steep gardens among shadows and blue shrubs

  an orphan whose huge head lolls like a glass-eyed hirsute globe

  squats weeping in the dew-chilled herb of dreams

  and thrusting the blade of his pen-knife ever deeper into his thigh

  And here is the swift silhouette of a sphinx on a screen in the sky

  Here is the abandoned saw-mill with its broken windows’ haggard gaze

  and see! here the pair of superb nocturnal swans

  each of which has been saddled with a mirror and firmly trussed to the back of a mule

  and the mules stationed as sentries on either side the harbour’s mouth where every now and then they are washed gently from side to side by the changing tide …

  And here among the dunes are strewn the battered hulks of wrecks

  which ere the hour is far advanced abruptly rise into the air

  and like a furtive school of whales go lunging inland through the night

  to make their clumsy nests on the most lofty towers and domes;

  while here upon the beach is the vast ballroom with invisible glass walls

  across the luminous floor of which a hundred pairs of invisible slippers are picking their way among numberless pools of invisible blood …

  And O how pungent is the firedamp’s musty fragrance in the hollow of each wave

  that falls on the shore by that small black-eyed town on the edge of a heliotrope sea

  where a man in a brilliantly illumined subterranean padded-cell

  concealed at a depth of about 69 feet below the level of the ground –

  (a man wearing a mask designed to resemble the head of a Paradise-bird

  with a diamond-encrusted beak of solid gold

  and clad in a sky-blue satin tunic across the front of which are embroidered in silver thread

  the words SPITTOON – OSMOSIS – SINGAPORE) –

  sits swinging regularly to and fro upon a platinum trapeze

  and thinking of the iridescent and immobile nipples of Death

  thinking of the vivid short-lived blossoms which are seen to sprout occasionally from the mouths of pregnant women

  of how the midnight-sun drapes the landscapes of Arabia with invertebrate question-marks like plumes snatched from an ailing eagle’s tail

  of the colourless abyss of idle days

  of Mary calling home the cattle across the sands of Dee

  and of the end of Summer with its interminable showers of salt and of soot …

  But now that the great water-spouts of midnight have subsided out at sea

  and that those barbaric cortèges of clouds swaying dangerously from side to side across the steeps of heaven

  like sodden hayricks in a sudden storm

  have finally all vanished one by one into the fuming workhouse-chimneys of the East –

  now that the cavernous yawn of the lonely female Titan lying sleeping on the softly gleaming sands

  has at last swallowed-up every starfish in sight –

  the livid wind once more begins to lift,

  stealthily weaving its fine-spun shawls in writhing swathes around

  the radius of that small black seaside town

  through which by now down each long soundless street

  swarms of somnambulistic barefoot children creep

  by slow degrees, still sealed by spell of dream,

  towards where soon the spume-besilvered waves shall shine and seethe

  as a new Sun soars like song out of the silence of the sea.

  w. 1938, p. 1941

  From HÖLDERLIN’S MADNESS

  (1938)

  HÖLDERLIN’S MADNESS

  FIGURE IN A LANDSCAPE

  The verdant valleys full of rivers

  Sang a fresh song to the thirsty hills.

  The rivers sang:

  ‘Our mother is the Night, into the Day we flow. The mills

  Which toil our waters have no thirst. We flow

  Like light.’

  And the great birds

  Which dwell among the rocks, flew down

  Into the dales to drink, and their dark wings

  Threw flying shades across the pastures green.

  At dawn the rivers flowed into the sea.

  The mountain birds

  Rose out of sleep like a winged cloud, a single fleet

  And flew into a newly-risen sun.

  – Anger of the sun: the deadly blood-red rays which strike oblique

  Through olive branches on the slopes and kill the kine.

  – Tears of the sun: the summer evening rains which hang grey veils

  Between the earth and sky, and soak the corn, and brim the lakes.

  – Dream of the sun: the mists which swim down from the icy heights

  And hide the gods who wander on the mountainsides at noon.

  The sun was anguished, and the sea

  Threw up its crested arms and cried aloud out of the depths;

  And the white horses of the waves raced the black horses of the clouds;

  The rocky peaks clawed at the sky like gnarled imploring hands;

  And the black cypresses strained upwards like the sex of a hanged man.

  *

  Across the agonizing land there fled

  Among the landscape’s limbs (the limbs

  Of a vast denuded body torn and vanquished from within)

  The chaste white road,

  Prolonged into the distance like a plaint.

  Between the opposition of the night and day

  Between the opposition of the earth and sky

  Between the opposition of the sea and land

  Between the opposition of the landscape and the road

  A traveller came

  Whose only nudity his armour was

  Against the whirlwind and the weapon, the undoing wound,

  And met himself half-way.

  Spectre as white as salt in the crude light of the sky

  Spectre confronted by flesh, the present and past

  Meet timelessly upon the endless road,

  Merge timelessly in time and pass away,

  Dreamed face away from stricken face into the bourn

  Of the unborn, and the real face of age into the fastnesses of death.

  Infinitely small among the infinitely huge,

  Drunk with the rising fluids of his breast, his boiling heart,

  Exposed and naked as the skeleton – upon the knees

  Like some tormented desert saint – he flung

  The last curse of regret against Omnipotence.

  And the lightning struck his face.

  *

  After the blow, the bruised earth blooms again,

  The storm-wrack, wrack of the cloudy sea

  Dissolve, the rocks relax,

  As the pallid phallus sinks in the clear dawn

  Of a new day, and the wild eyes melt and close,

  And the eye of the sun is no more blind –

  Clear milk of love, O lave the devastated vale,

  And peace of high-noon, soothe the traveller’s pain

  Whose hands still grope and clutch, whose head

  Thrown back entreats the guerison

  And music of your light!

&nbs
p; The valley rivers irrigate the land, the mills

  Revolve, the hills are fecund with the cypress and the vine,

  And the great eagles guard the mountain heights.

  Above the peaks in mystery there sit

  The Presences, the Unseen in the sky,

  Inscrutable, whose influences like rays

  Descend upon him, pass through and again

  Like golden bees the hive of his lost head.

  p. 1938

  ORPHEUS IN THE UNDERWORLD

  Curtains of rock

  And tears of stone,

  Wet leaves in a high crevice of the sky:

  From side to side the draperies

  Drawn back by rigid hands.

  And he came carrying the shattered lyre,

  And wearing the blue robes of a king,

  And looking through eyes like holes torn in a screen;

  And the distant sea was faintly heard,

  From time to time, in the suddenly rising wind,

  Like broken song.

  Out of his sleep, from time to time,

  From between half-open lips,

  Escaped the bewildered words which try to tell

  The tale of his bright night

  And his wing-shadowed day

  The soaring flights of thought beneath the sun

  Above the islands of the seas

  And all the deserts, all the pastures, all the plains

  Of the distracting foreign land.

  He sleeps with the broken lyre between his hands,

  And round his slumber are drawn back

  The rigid draperies, the tears and wet leaves,

  Cold curtains of rock concealing the bottomless sky.

  p. 1938

  TENEBRAE

  Brown darkness on the gazing face

  In the cavern of candlelight reflects

  The passing of the immaterial world in the deep eyes.

  The granite organ in the crypt

  Resounds with rising thunder through the blood,

  With daylight song, unearthly song that floods

  The brain with bursting suns:

  Yet it is night.

  It is the endless night, whose every star

  Is in the spirit like the snow of dawn,

  Whose meteors are the brilliance of summer,

  And whose wind and rain

  Are all the halcyon freshness of the valley rivers,

  Where the swans,

 

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