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New Collected Poems

Page 27

by David Gascoyne


  Close at hand is the brisk business district, just under you lie

  The platforms from which the incessant electric expresses

  Go rushing from City to faraway Suburbs, and back from the Suburbs again.

  [Narration Three]

  Here are underground Boulevards bright with Bazaars, here you’ll find

  Vast fields for the shop-window gazer to graze in. Arcades

  Branch off on each side, endless Galleries lined with glasscases invite

  To inspection of carloads of diamondmine loot, of forests of flowers,

  Tropic fruits piled in tiers, Pin-up waxwork girls posed in parades

  To show off new nylons, new sequins, new rhinestones, new lace-trimmed furcoats.

  [Narration One]

  But don’t linger too long for a rush-hour approaches and here it’s unwise

  To risk getting caught by the tide of the throng that flows through at its height.

  Better make your way now to the flights of steps all leading down

  To the slow-moving staircases, up to the fast escalators

  Descending past columns of spiralling stairs to the level where tubes

  Have been bored for the feet to press through from the foot of one flight

  [Narration Two]

  Of stepping stones, on to the passages in, then the passages out,

  To the thoroughfares out of which more escalators are moving, some more

  Slowly, the others more quickly, first up and then down, on and on,

  On and off, up and up, down down down, go on down, till at last

  The wonderful system will crown the true will to success with success

  As the peace known at zero-hour’s peak on the heart of the rusher descends.

  [Sleeping Citydweller]

  Oh! Let me stop, I must sit down!

  I’ve been deceived, I am confused!

  I must wake from this nightmare soon.

  Among these crowds I’ve got quite lost –

  Words in the tunnels’ roaring drown!

  [Train-Wheels Chorus]

  Hurry up and get on Hurry up and get on Hurry up and get on Hurry

  I couldn’t care less I couldn’t care less I couldn’t care less I couldn’t

  The Main Chance The Main Chance The Main Chance The Main

  Get on Care less Get on Care less Get on Care less Get on Care less

  Teach a lesson teach a lesson teach a lesson teach a lesson teach a

  The Damned are the Damned are the Damned are the Damned are the

  The Day of Wrath the Atom Plan the Wrath to Come the Atom

  Bomb the Coming Day the Greatest Bang the Biggest Bomb the

  Wrath of God the World of Man the Day to Come the Bang the Bomb … (ad inf.)

  [Guide Voice]

  As you move at a pace that gets constantly faster, your eyes

  Are increasingly caught and held fast at each step by one after

  Another phrase, slogan and image set up to solicit as much

  Of the crowd-individual’s attention as each in his hurry can spare.

  [Narration One]

  You may look where you like for the public’s fastidious and only permits

  Its favourite posters to brighten the walls of such sanctums as these:

  Now the principal stations afford a great treat with the constant variety

  Of the attractions inviting the traveller’s mind’s eye to rove towards

  All sorts of model resorts; at his journey’s end wait to stare down on him

  On his arrival more posters depicting the places abroad he must

  Hasten to visit as soon as he can to discover:

  [Narration Two]

  NEW VISTAS NEW THRESHOLDS NEW PLEASURES NEW BEAUTIES NEW BEACHES NEW LIGHT

  ON OLD-WORLD INNS NEW WORLDS IN DISGUISE OLD CATHEDRALS SPOTLIGHTED

  NEW CRUISES TO BEAUTYSPOTS SEA-COASTS BEST SUITED TO NUDES

  [Narration Three]

  Look! Here posters plaster the best people’s eye with huge glimpses

  Of Scenes from the Very Best Shows of the Year by the Star-Chamber

  Critics’ Assembly Selected: The Most Highly Praised, the Best Advertised, then

  The most Noted for Highlypaid Acting, the Most Controversial,

  The Brightest, the Loudest, Most Daringly Brutal, and Quite the Most Crude.

  [Narration One]

  The Crowd’s hardheaded leaders alone have the leisure to cast a glance over them

  As they press past down the passage from exit to box-office queue but they turn

  To present to the next passerby their opinion for what it is worth and

  He’ll then in his turn send it on to be sent on till common consent

  Has agreed that it’s fit to be fully divulged to the public at large.

  [Narration Two]

  Now here you must follow the people in front of you down some more stairs

  Where as you descend you will find on each side are arranged on the walls

  More advertisements eager to snatch at your glance as you pass:

  If you miss one or two it won’t matter, you’ll find them again further on.

  [Publicity Chorus]

  STRAPLESS BREASTAPPEAL BRA MAKES YOU HARDER TO GET

  NEW LYNX LIMOUSINE WITH LOW FAMILY EYELINE

  DON’T LET THEM DESCRIBE YOU AS DIRTY! GET ‘WET’

  HOW’S YOUR COLON LOOK? TREAT IT TO LIQUORICE SOAP

  WATCH APPROACH OF PHENOMENAL NEW STAR ON SKYLINE

  VAN WORMWOOD EXCLUSIVELY FEATURED IN ‘DOPE’

  ‘THIS SOULTWISTER BLISTERS THE PAINT OFF THE SET!’

  DRINK MORE DRINK! WEAR MORE CLOTHES! DON’T LOSE HOPE! DON’T FORGET!

  WEAR MORE SMILES PLEASE! LAUGH LOUDER! LOOK AFTER YOURSELF!

  USE CHARM AND DISCRETION! BE TOUGH! DON’T GET LAID ON THE SHELF!

  [Train-Wheels Chorus]

  I couldn’t care less I couldn’t care less I couldn’t care less I couldn’t

  A chance you can’t afford to lose a chance you can’t afford to lose a

  Smooth as glass and tough as hell as smooth as glass and tough as hell

  The damned are the damned are the damned are the damned are the

  The World to come the Atom Plan the World of Man the Atom Bomb the

  Coming Day the Biggest Bang the Wrath of God the Atom Age the Day of Wrath … (ad inf.)

  [Narration One]

  The Sleeper came here on a Quest, to find that he is lost,

  Deepsunk in the confusions of a City underground,

  And now looks round him, lonely and bewildered, in the midst

  Of anonymous masked multitudes, surrounded by the sounds

  Of Latter Pandemonium, Hell’s ideal up-to-date

  Metropolis of Commerce-cum-Cacophomonium,

  The Capital of Every Pseudo Super-City State.

  [Commentator]

  Tonight is Carnival Time in this great underworld city of platforms and staircases and here I am on the spot to give you a ringside description of the scene in the Pluto Plaza, where a vast number of masked revellers are already waiting on the great black ice ballroom floor for the New Season to be officially declared open by – why yes, here he is, it’s a top secret but I think I can let you in on it, it’s a very important V.I.P. indeed, now I can see his flaming whiskers and gaily pointed tail as he goes past on his way to the rostrum. Everyone’s tense with excitement, the ice of the ballroom floor’s going to melt in a moment, I think he’s going to address them, yes, now here it comes, this is the moment everyone’s been waiting for, you’re actually going to hear the Old Man himself speaking.

  [V.I.P.]

  I have every hope that those of you who hear me speak tonight will be as deeply stirred as I have been to learn that it is to be my special privilege to have the honour of presenting to Charity for auction on your behalf this most artfully designed and purposeful-looking Pair of Silver Ceremonial Scissors, having first severed with them in a single
snip – the mile-long cordon-bleu communication-ribbon which has been arranged so as to run round these entire fully licensed premises.

  (He cuts the cordon)

  I hereby declare endless Carnival to be left open to the Four Winds of Publicity, Gossip, Idletalk, and Rumour, and have much sly pleasure in handing over all responsibility for the conduct of further proceedings to the Master of Spring Opening Ceremonies, who is already seizing the Microphone to Address you.

  (Applause)

  [Master of Spring Opening Ceremonies]

  Applause comes first! That’s what I like to hear! Just one more burst! Now when

  I give the sign, let there be music. Bandsmen may burst their drums but have no fear,

  Dear Dressdesignstars and neat Grooms. Dance, dance until you faint.

  Abandon everything. No one would think that your death might be near.

  Have no anxiety at all. You’d look a million dollars at your worst.

  Never let laughter falter lest its note sound forced, nor let your feet

  Trip the less lightly over foolish fear; no one looks quaint

  By being opulently over-lightly clad. Dance in the street!

  Let the rare joy of true extravagance in dress carry you on

  From whirl to whirl, and through hall after hall

  Of topflight fashion, as from square to square dance floor!

  May I remind you that there are none so mad

  Among these streetwalkers that the red carpets spread

  For your fleet crystal-slippered toes alone to tread

  Will not inspire in them a rapt respect while you are revelling; not one

  Who following your least step close as facsimile permit

  Will not wish that she might be at once flash-photo’d dead

  Were she but gowned with the unerring taste shown in your very shroud!

  So fling yourselves headlong into our Carnival, and let your joy in it

  Be long as night, and very, very loud!

  [Chorus of Masks] (confusedly)

  Out of this world. Marvellous! Of course, this is sheer Heaven!

  Out out of this World World. Exquisite.

  Divine! Out of this World. Heaven!

  Out of this World. Darling! Such heaven!

  I simply worship him. Ah, what Heaven! Worship her worship it

  Simply Divine! I do adore to dance!

  Divine! Out of this World! Sheer heaven, my dear, but too divine!

  This world is heaven! Divine! I adore it, Darling!

  You do look heavenly! Adorable! I think your make-up’s too divine!

  [Narration One]

  Although the style’s incongruous, one may quote here, I hope,

  These apposite Augustan lines from Alexander Pope:

  ‘Hell rises, Heaven descends, and dance on earth:

  Gods, imps, and monsters, music, rage and mirth,

  A fire, a jig, a battle, and a ball;

  Till one wide conflagration swallows all.’

  [Voice of a Mask]

  Smoothburnt by artificial sunrays, cold with sweat

  Under our swathed robes’ sheaths since zero lies within,

  Perplexed apparently by our perdition, inwardly

  Rehearsing rigmaroles of self-defensive calumny, we go

  The tortuous easy way towards uncertainty out of

  The pit of ages past. Ours is harsh music. Masks

  Like snailshells are become, the glossy whorled

  Concealment we excrete to screen our softness from ourselves.

  Should silence fall, we’d shake like withered leaves and surely tell

  How easy paralytic souls a prey to terror fall

  Stonedeafened by midwinter’s blasts at last! So endless noise

  We need to stuff our burning ears with, huge uproars

  Must keep on breaking out lest we should judge

  Unwillingly how far and near are all one to the void

  Whose dungeon swallows up the instant after our least sound.

  When buffeted by pangs of dread of failure, we at once

  Wrap blankets of cacophony about us, plucking strings

  Of strident resonance to death with frantic fingers, while alas,

  The only ground-note to all songs is like the throbbing sob

  Of childhood by our cold sophistication throttled, choked

  Back in our lying throats, to underlie, pent in our breasts,

  Each cry during the long spell of our carnival expelled

  To swell the roar that rises with each climax repostponed.

  (The Music, in which the Dies Irae has been distinguishable, played simultaneously with Boys and Girls Come out to Play, here reaches the summit of its crescendo with a high, piercing trumpet note.)

  [Narration One]

  Sleepers, Awake! Awake from Sleep! Back from the world of Shades!

  The trumpet sounds, the curtain falls, the fabric strange dissolves

  And the familiar scene shows through: the darkened stage

  Which is the sleeper’s bedroom; the familiar properties

  Of daily use arranged around the bed. The ordinary street

  Outside the window and its streetlamps in the ordinary night.

  You awaken from the Pandemonium of your dream, the midnight carnival,

  And find yourself in the Dark City of the present day again.

  [Narration Two]

  We think at night. We break the spell of every-day if thought can wake

  From the deep twilight sleep of thinking darkness light.

  [Narration Three]

  It has been said that in the Marketplace, man sleeps his deepest sleep.

  [Narration Two]

  Purely material reality, if reality it were, would be lived in by no more

  Than animated corpses, dead-alive, with ghosts of thoughts

  Haunting their brainpans’ coils of cells in an irrational way,

  However rational their words and meanings were.

  [Narration One]

  Tonight you in the dark attentive to the Night

  Thoughts we have here assembled, may be more

  Than merely thinking that you wake. When the new day

  Emerges from the everlasting East perhaps you may.

  3 ENCOUNTER WITH SILENCE

  [Narration One]

  Night Thoughts. Night Music. Now from buried labyrinths and caves of the town-dweller’s anxious dream, from claustrophobic corridors of nocturnal soliloquy, we move away until we can emerge into the open air in a secluded countryside.

  [Narration Two]

  There we shall find again the calm night world of Nature.

  [Narration One]

  Nature, the Earth, Unconsciousness and Death. We are drawn down and back towards them in the Night.

  [Narration Three]

  Nocturnal Music. Meditations in dark gardens. Gradually forming thoughts pursued in gardens by such solitary strollers as may now find themselves outdoors, taking a turn or two before retiring, taking a breath or two of fresher air.

  [Narration One]

  Walking there without a predetermined object; in the starlight; at a slow pace, uncertainly. Standing still from time to time as though to listen, yet not listening to any clearly determined sound.

  [Narration Two]

  The Night music has drifted off into remote serenity, leaving the hearer standing still to listen to the stillness of the garden, waiting to hear what may be born out of the stillness.

  [Narration Three]

  He stands still and seems to listen to some unknown distant thing; something that might be coming from … from where? What echo from beyond what last horizon?

  [Narration One]

  There is nothing to be heard. The garden is quite still. There is only silence in the darkness.

  [Narration Two]

  There is seldom experienced anywhere on the inhabited earth, for more than a moment or two at a time, such a thing as silence. For it is something we imagine only, Silence, an
idea we have of what a complete absence of sound would be like. Real Silence is the message spoken to us that we fear most of all to hear. What we usually call silence is most often no more really than a confused medley of diminutive sounds to which it would be too tiring to pay conscious attention.

  [Narration Three]

  Everywhere about us, day and night, goes on the eddying stream of murmur: little drifting sighs and rumblings, whispers, coughing, whistles, moans. Goes on rising from the earth, the home of life, birthplace of restlessness, where all the rhythms meet, and cross, and intertwine uninterruptedly.

  Chorus 1: A window rattling in the wind

  Chorus 2: That everlasting rear-exhausting, gear-exhausted car

  Chorus 3: Bark of a mongrel

  Chorus 1: Tap of an old benighted blind-man’s cane

  Chorus 2: Another mongrel’s barking

  Chorus 1: An infinitesimal insect’s lovesong, scarcely a second long

  Chorus 2: That wretched child …

  Chorus 3: An ancient iron engine shunts and shunts

  Chorus 1: O the wind and the rain in the rain and the wind in the rain in the wind

  Chorus 2: O love return, return, O darling come …

  Chorus 3: A mammoth feather’s smothered fluttering

  Chorus 1: And screams like hell and shunts and shunts and shunts

  Chorus 2: Bark of another mongrel

  Chorus 3: The same everlasting car

  Chorus 1: Old oak’s slow taut-slack creak, clock’s low quick-slow-quick tick

  Chorus 2: Sand trickling underneath the door, dust blown across the floor

  Chorus 3: The sleeper’s snore soon swells the stream which never dies away

  But flows on till with dawn it joins the streaming sounds of day.

  [Narration One]

  Night music of mysterious hazard. Dream-fugues: variations on fortuitous themes; intricate tracery unwinding like designs drawn in a trance across the taut sky of the universal Ear.

  [Narration Two]

  Decrepid gust-blown tinkling of a crumbling pagoda’s bells …

  [Narration Three]

  Intensely complex tight-screwedup tattoo of tiny drums …

  [Narration One]

  The velvet-padded hammering of life-blood’s changing pulse.

  [Narration Three]

  The pulse of changing life is the deep underlying constant. And the Unchanging also is a pulse, flowing through all that lives, a single pulse.

  [Narration Two]

  The changes and the pauses and occasional recurrence of abrupt irregularity make sound-patterns we overhear but never really hear. Our hearing intercepts no more than one bar at a time. These patterns are upon a scale not measurable in hours. Attention wanders; thinking intervenes.

 

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