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Collected Poems

Page 6

by Anthony Burgess


  Quiet as a moving munching herd of cows. And

  As dancers on the stage taking their bows and

  Boos in an endless belt endlessly fill it, s-

  O this small troop marched in a circle till its

  300 men looked damned near like 3000.

  Ta-rah, ta-ray – clash pans, flash torches. Flustered,

  And deafened as 300 brass are mustered,

  The enemy collapses like a custard.

  Such thrift! Today we have our martial brawls,

  Our soldiers heed the bugle when it calls

  And waste 300 fucking cannon-balls.

  34. THE FOXES

  The Bible is quite verminous with foxes.

  Samson caught hundreds and, with foxy cunning,

  Tied torches to their tails and set them running

  Through his foes’ harvest-fields – thus, with hot proxies,

  Saving them sweat. Still, they wished ninety poxes

  Upon him and increased their vengeful gunning.

  Though vermin then, where are they now? They’re shunning

  Our hounds, like bishops shunning heterodoxies.

  We ought to want them, since they stank of virtue

  When Samson used them against naughty men.

  But still an eggless henless world would hurt you

  More than a foxless. If he came back again

  With scores of foxes sniffing round his skirt, you

  Would say: ‘I’d rather have a fucking hen.’

  35. GOD HELPS THOSE WHO HELP THEMSELVES (1)

  Of all the Bible stories that they tell,

  This one to come is quite the most fantastic.

  A sonnet being so damned inelastic,

  I’ll require two to tell it really well.

  Well, now – the exodists from Egypt’s hell

  Met the mad Malechites who, dreadful, drastic.

  Ferocious, tastelessly enthusiastic,

  Fell on the Hebrews, and the Hebrews fell.

  God made a memorandum. After all,

  The Jews pursued the then correct religion.

  After four hundred years he called on Saul.

  ‘The Malechites,’ he said, ‘deserve the axe.

  Spit the whole nation; roast it like a pigeon.

  Don’t leave a feather on their fucking backs.’

  36. GOD HELPS THOSE WHO HELP THEMSELVES (2)

  So in God’s name Saul went and waded in,

  Trouncing them in one horrible stampede,

  Goats, calves and all. Mercy maybe or greed

  Or something made him save Prince Agag’s skin.

  Samuel now prophesied about Saul’s sin!

  ‘Idolater, betrayer of our creed,

  A holier Israelite will supersede

  Your reign and make a holier reign begin.

  Bring me the prince you blasphemously spared.’

  Tremulous as a fatted pig, that prince

  Stuttered – agagagag aghast, shit-scared.

  The holy Samuel did not blink or wince

  But raised the butcher’s blade that he had bared

  And made a mound of Malechitish mince.

  37. DAVID’S DUEL

  How powerful is God’s arm! He sent a boy

  To fight Goliath, who was tough and scary,

  Who swallowed foes like oysters of the prairie

  And thought he’d stamp on David like a toy.

  But God wished Israel to yell with joy

  To know that every flabby, weak, unhairy

  Weed that loves Jesus and his mother Mary

  Finds giants rather easy to destroy.

  Seeing the stone and sling and stripling shepherd,

  Goliath cried: ‘You little prick, you’ve gone a

  Mite too far,’ and tensed up like a leopard.

  But David blessed the saints and the Madonna,

  Measured his fireline, fired his pebble up it

  And saw Goliath crumple like a puppet.

  38. HOLY KING DAVID

  King David’s later life? The stories vary.

  It seems, though, his prophetic eye was sharp,

  He spoke with God, he much preferred the bar-p-

  Arlour to the coffee-shop or dairy.

  Jesus, of David’s seed through holy Mary,

  For David was a very pericarp,

  Had his gab-gift, but could not play the harp

  Nor sing like David, King Saul’s prize canary.

  The Bible gives a fairish bona fide

  Account of him, although it’s hard to follow:

  The story is elliptical, untidy.

  You’ll learn, however, that he loved to wallow

  In love, and frot until his balls were hollow,

  From Saturday till pretty late on Friday.

  39. THE JUDGMENT OF SOLOMON

  Solomon’s judgment. So. It makes you laugh.

  But could a judge upon a modern bench,

  Nose lifted high against the rabble’s stench,

  For all his wigs and tomes and courtroom staff,

  Do better? He, drained like his own carafe,

  Hearing one wench scream at the other wench

  In language that would make a bargee blench,

  Could only say: ‘Let’s chop the child in half.’

  The parish register was plain to see,

  You say. He could have checked on her or her name,

  The date and place of birth of son or daughter.

  Fool. In those days nobody had a surname,

  And parish registers came in A.D.,

  When Christ had shown a brand-new use for water.

  40. THE FAIR JUDITH

  The Holy Bible tells how the seduc-

  Tive Judith feasted Holofernes, winner

  Of the late bloody war. They finished dinner,

  She doused the lights. He, leering at his luck,

  Leapt on her unresisting. Then she struck

  His head off with a sword and cried: ‘Foul sinner,’

  (His milk still frothing to the boil within her)

  ‘Now he could find some blacker hole to fuck.’

  She heaved the head up in her lily hand,

  Though it was heavy, horrible and gory,

  And did a tour of triumph through the land.

  I find two morals in this sacred story:

  (a) prove your faith by killing people and

  (b) be a bloody whore for heaven’s glory.

  41. GUESSING GAME

  The chaste Susannah – what was she chased for?

  Her beauty, yes, but was there something more?

  The sort of reputation that she bore?

  You said the word, not I: the word is w—e.

  Those old men said it too (Aaaarh, nothing’s lower

  Than watching at a lady’s bathroom door).

  But Daniel caught them out. His lion-roar

  Condemned their heads, not hers, to hit the floor.

  Chaste, was she? Hm, perhaps she couldn’t bring

  Herself to fancy two limp bits of string.

  A woman’s nature’s nature in the spring.

  To get to know it, cease your pondering,

  Slap on your chest two puddings in a sling

  And let your haunches launch into a swing.

  42. BELSHAZZAR’S FEAST

  Belshazzar, drunk, observed a kind of smoke

  Resolve itself to something vaguely manual

  Writing upon the wall. He called on Daniel.

  ‘Many tickle your arse – What’s this – a joke?’

  The ambiguous bilge that Daniel then spoke

  Made less sense than the yapping of a spaniel.

  ‘Weighed in the balance to the utmost granule,

  Found wanting.’ Why not just ‘You’re going to croak’?

  All right, that’s not a literal translation.

  But what came next was no big fat surprise:

  Belshazzar didn’t live to eat his breakfast.

  A prophet, scared of sti
cking out his neck, fast-

  Idious about his reputation,

  Ought to be told that riddles are damned lies.

  43. THE EIGHTH OF DECEMBER

  Serious talk now; let’s not arse about.

  December eight – what do we celebrate?

  Come on, you know. Good – the Immaculate

  Conception. When that apple-loving lout

  Adam first took it in his head to flout

  The Lord’s law, angels said: ‘Evacuate,’

  And firmly locked the paradisal gate,

  Keeping his maculate descendants out.

  Poor Mother Nature, ever since that ban,

  Cannot breed even half a child that’s blameless.

  There boils within the rising prick of man

  The seed of something terrible though nameless.

  So praise to Joachim who, with Saint Ann,

  Achieved a fuck that was uniquely shameless.

  44. THE ANNUNCIATION

  You know the day, the month, even the year.

  While Mary ate her noonday plate of soup,

  The Angel Gabriel, like a heaven-hurled hoop,

  Was bowling towards her through the atmosphere.

  She watched him crash the window without fear

  And enter through the hole in one swift swoop.

  A lily in his fist, his wings adroop,

  ‘Ave’, he said, and after that, ‘Maria.

  Rejoice, because the Lord’s eternal love

  Has made you pregnant – not by orthodox

  Methods, of course. The Pentecostal Dove

  Came when you slept and nested in your box.’

  ‘A hen?’ she blushed, ‘for I know nothing of –’

  The angel nodded, knowing she meant cocks.

  45. THE MADONNA’S MARRIAGE

  Only a few weeks after did our Virgin see

  The need to make a matrimonial match,

  To build a nest wherein the egg could hatch

  (Her little belly had begun to burgeon, see.)

  It was, therefore, a matter of some urgency.

  She didn’t seek the freshest of the batch;

  The one she gave her hand to was no catch,

  But any port will do in an emergency.

  The foolish gossips gossiped at the feast:

  ‘She might have got a younger one at least,

  Not an old dribbler frosty in the blood.’

  But that old dribbler dribbling by the side

  Of such a beautiful and youthful bride

  Found his dry stalk was bursting into bud.

  46. THE VISIT

  Mary received, while burning Joseph’s toast,

  A letter. ‘Who the hell – ?’ (under her breath),

  Aloud: ‘Ah – cousin Saint Elizabeth.’

  Elizabeth, it seemed, could also boast

  A pregnancy, though not from the Holy Ghost.

  Still, her next birthday was her sixtieth.

  Though travel then was slow expensive death,

  ‘We’re coming’, Mary wrote, then caught the post.

  They went. After a short magnificat,

  The women were soon chattering away

  Of swellings, morning sickness, and all that.

  Joseph decided that he’d like to stay

  A month or so, and so hung up his hat

  Better than sawing wood all bloody day.

  47. EPIPHANY

  From a far country – how far? Very far:

  It grows, for instance, cinnamon and cocoa –

  Three kings, their robes rococo or barocco,

  Followed their leader – viz., that big bright star.

  Each Magus had, like any czar or tsar,

  Guards, steeds, a page, a clown with painted boko,

  Coaches, a camel, and in leisured loco-

  Motion they swayed towards where the Hebrews are.

  They reached the stable with their caravan

  One morning, evening, noon or afternoon,

  With gifts – incense for God, and myrrh for man.

  For Christ as king they had a gold doubloon –

  Proper, they thought, for the top Christian.

  They were, it seems, some centuries too soon.

  48. THE CIRCUMCISION

  Our Lady had a painful Christmas Day

  And heaven the monopoly of mirth.

  Between an ox and ass she brought to birth

  A stableboy that stank of rags and hay.

  His substitutive dad had to obey

  The law, so took the lord of earth

  Templewards, to have half a farthingsworth

  Of hypostatic foreskin cut away.

  Thirty years later saw the blessed Lord on

  A journey to the rolling river Jordan

  To be baptised by Mary’s cousin’s son.

  A Christian man thus sprang from a prepuceless

  Jew. I call most turncoats fucking useless

  But make a rare exception for this one.

  49. CHRIST’S FORESKIN

  That sacred relic, by the way, was hid

  And either kept in camphor or else iced.

  It grew so precious it could not be priced.

  And then one day His Holiness undid

  A holy box and raised a holy lid –

  Behold – the foreskin of our saviour Christ,

  Shrimplike in shape, most elegantly sliced,

  At last to profane eyes exhibited.

  In eighty other Christian lands they show

  This self-same prize for reverent eyes to hail.

  You look incredulous, my friend. But know

  That faith, though buffeted, must never fail.

  The explanation’s this: God let it grow

  After the clipping, like a fingernail.

  50. THE FLIGHT OF THE HOLY FAMILY

  Joseph was doing bull-roars on his back,

  A dream corrida crowd was yelling ‘Toro!’

  He slept cut off from coming care and sorrow,

  Making the stable shake with roar and rack.

  But then an angel dealt him a rough smack

  And said: ‘You know what day it is tomorrow?

  The twenty-eighth. I managed, see, to borrow

  A copy of the current almanac.’

  Herod announced the Feast of Childermass.

  Joseph rushed out and had to pay a pretty

  Price (how he cursed) for an old spavined ass:

  A carpenter would rather gyp than be gypped.

  And so they moved off mouselike towards Egypt,

  Missing a lively day in David’s city.

  51. THE SLAUGHTER OF THE INNOCENTS

  King Herod now, to minimal applause,

  Ordered the babies to be stuck like swine.

  There was an uproar then in Palestine

  And not, O Jesus help us, without cause.

  Those who had seen this coming did not pause

  To hide their babes, but let them croon or whine

  As visible as laundry on the line,

  While they had masses said to Santa Claus.

  Their saviour (saviour?) halfway to the delta

  Smelt nothing of the filthy bloody welter

  Nor heard the parents curse or ululate.

  The troops of Herod smote and did not spare

  But with each crack a splinter sought the air

  And feebly tapped on heaven’s heavy gate.

  52. ORIGINAL SIN

  When he was old enough for politics

  Jesus went splashing on the Jordan’s bed.

  He ceased to be a Jew and joined instead

  The Apostolic Roman Catholics.

  Then he went dropping homilies like bricks.

  ‘He who seeks heaven with an unwashed head

  Will see the kingdom with his arse’, he said,

  Shouting the odds, wagging his crucifix.

  Only his mother got there unbaptised,

  Which proves she waved goodbye to mother earth

 
A good Jewess, staunch in the faith and steady.

  Heaven had got her soul well organised:

  Why rub and scrub a thing that came to birth

  As white as someone’s laundry line already?

  53. THE WEDDING AT CANA (1)

  The guests at Cana, vinously aswim,

  Aroar for more, found every bloody butt

  Was empty, and the liquor stores were shut.

  The innkeeper, fired by a roguish whim,

  Had three casks filled with water to the brim,

  Then told each sozzled fuddled serving slut

  To lug them where, importantly astrut,

  The host was, and to leave the rest to him.

  Christ was a guest, dressed in his best apparel,

  But the host begged a sort of magic act

  Through Mary: ‘Make him turn this lot to wine.’

  Mary replied: ‘I know this son of mine –

  Moody. But if I speak to him with tact

  You’ll get, maybe, a quarter of a barrel.’

  54. THE WEDDING AT CANA (2)

  And so she begged an instant grapeless wine.

  But Jesus, who was hardly yet adult,

  Sighed like a stone leaving a catapult

  And scowled: ‘This problem’s neither yours nor mine,

  Mother. Permit me coldly to decline

  To help these boozers. Easy or difficult

  Is not the point. Let the fat host consult

  Some other thaumaturge, the smirking swine.

  Just so some soak can blurt a drunken toast

  Or swill the teeth he’s sunk into a roast,

  You want me to work miracles and such,

  To get a toothcomb and go combing out

  The various troubles lurking all about.

  I’ve troubles of my own, thanks very much.’

  55. THE WEDDING AT CANA (3)

  Jesus, I think (Christ rest his spirit), chose a

  Tantrum like that one not to be unkind

  But to show off. A young man is inclined

  To blow his trumpet oftener than his nose. A-

  Las, Our Lady, so says the composer

 

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