Beyond enraged idleness to enraged idleness.
   With no more hours of hope, and none of regret,
   Before each sun may rise, you salute it for set:
   Trudge, body!
   MUSIC AT NIGHT
   Voices in gentle harmony
   Rise from the slopes above the midnight sea,
   And every sound comes true and clear,
   And the song’s old:
   It charms the wisest ear –
   Night and the sea and music bind
   Such forced perfection on the darkened mind
   That, ah now, with that dying fall
   All truth seems told
   And one light shines for all –
   The Moon, who from the hill-top streams
   On each white face and throat her absent beams.
   The song-enchanted fellows send
   Their chords of gold
   Rippling beyond time’s end.
   They link arms and all evils fly:
   The flesh is tamed, the spirit circles high.
   Each angel softly sings his part
   Not proud, not bold,
   Dream-ecstasied in heart.
   But lamp-light glitters through the trees:
   Lamp-light will check these minor harmonies,
   And soon the busy Sun will rise
   And blaze and scold
   From the same hill-top skies.
   WITHOUT PAUSE
   Without cause and without
   Pause blankness follows, turning
   Man once more into
   An autumn elm or
   Ash in autumn mist,
   His arms upraised, no
   Heart or head, moreover
   Nothing heard but now
   This constant dropping always
   Of such heavy drops
   Distilled on finger-tips
   From autumn mist and
   Nowhere immanence or end
   Or pause or cause,
   But all is blankness
   Seeming headache, yet not
   Headache, yet not heartache:
   Wanting heart and head,
   The tree man – false,
   Because the angry sap
   Has faded down again
   To tree roots dreading
   Cold, and these abandoned
   Leaves lie fallen flat
   To make mould for
   The pretty primroses that
   Spring again in Spring
   With little faces blank,
   And sap again then
   Rising proves the pain
   Of Spring a fancy
   Not attempted, no: so,
   Until the frantic trial,
   Blankness only made for
   Pondering and tears against
   That sudden lurch-away.
   THE CLOCK MAN
   The clocks are ticking with good will:
   They make a cheerful sound.
   I am that temporizer still
   Who sends their hands around,
   By fresh experiments with birth and age
   Teasing the times each time to further courage.
   You who are grateful for your birth
   To hours that ticked you free
   (And gratefully relapse to earth)
   Your thanks are due to me –
   Which I accept, inured to shame, and mock
   My vows to timelessness, sworn with the clock.
   THE COMMONS OF SLEEP
   That ancient common-land of sleep
   Where the close-herded nations creep
   On all fours, tongue to ground –
   Be sure that every night or near
   I, sheep-like too, go wandering there
   And wake to have slept sound.
   How comfortable can be misrule
   Of dream that whirls the antic spool
   Of sense-entangling twist,
   Where proud in idiot state I sit
   At skirmish of ingenious wit,
   My nape by fairies kissed.
   ‘From the world’s loving-cup to drink,
   In sleep, can be no shame,’ I think.
   ‘Sleep has no part in shame.’
   But to lie down in hope to find
   Licence for devilishness of mind –
   Will sleeping bear the blame?
   For at such welcome dream extends
   Its hour beyond where sleeping ends
   And eyes are washed for day,
   Till mind and mind’s own honour seem
   That nightmare dream-within-the-dream
   Which brings the most dismay.
   Then lamps burn red and glow-worm green
   And naked dancers grin between
   The rusting bars of love.
   Loud and severe the drunken jokes
   Go clanging out in midnight strokes.
   I weep: I wake: I move.
   WHAT TIMES ARE THESE?
   Against the far slow fields of white,
   A cloud came suddenly in sight
   And down the valley passed,
   Compact and grey as bonfire smoke –
   This one cloud only, like a joke,
   It flew so fast.
   And more: the shape, no inexact
   Idle half-likeness but a fact
   Which all my senses knew,
   Was a great dragon’s and instead
   Of fangs it had the scoffing head
   Of an old Jew.
   What times are these that visions bear
   So plainly down the morning air
   With wings and scales and beard?
   I stared, and quick, a swirl of wind
   Caught at his head: he writhed and thinned,
   He disappeared.
   The last that stayed were the wide wings
   And long tail barbed with double stings:
   These drifted on alone
   Over the watch-tower and the bay
   So out to open sea, where they
   Did not fade soon.
   I knew him well, the Jew, for he
   Was honest Uncle Usury
   Who lends you blood for blood:
   His dragon’s claws were keen and just
   To bleed the body into dust,
   As the bond stood.
   What times are these – to be allowed
   This ancient vision of grey cloud
   Gone in a casual breath?
   The times of the torn dragon-wing
   Still threatening seaward and the sting
   Still poised for death.
   From Collected Poems
   (1938)
   THE CHRISTMAS ROBIN
   The snows of February had buried Christmas
   Deep in the woods, where grew self-seeded
   The fir-trees of a Christmas yet unknown,
   Without a candle or a strand of tinsel.
   Nevertheless when, hand in hand, plodding
   Between the frozen ruts, we lovers paused
   And ‘Christmas trees!’ cried suddenly together,
   Christmas was there again, as in December.
   We velveted our love with fantasy
   Down a long vista-row of Christmas trees,
   Whose coloured candles slowly guttered down
   As grandchildren came trooping round our knees.
   But he knew better, did the Christmas robin –
   The murderous robin with his breast aglow
   And legs apart, in a spade-handle perched:
   He prophesied more snow, and worse than snow.
   CERTAIN MERCIES
   Now must all satisfaction
   Appear mere mitigation
   Of an accepted curse?
   Must we henceforth be grateful
   That the guards, though spiteful,
   Are slow of foot and wit?
   That by night we may spread
   Over the plank bed
   A thin coverlet?
   That the rusty water
   In the unclean pitcher
   Our thirst quenches?
   That the rotten, detestable
   Food i
s yet eatable
   By us ravenous?
   That the prison censor
   Permits a weekly letter?
   (We may write: ‘We are well.’)
   That, with patience and deference,
   We do not experience
   The punishment cell?
   That each new indignity
   Defeats only the body,
   Pampering the spirit
   With obscure, proud merit?
   THE CUIRASSIERS OF THE FRONTIER
   Goths, Vandals, Huns, Isaurian mountaineers,
   Made Roman by our Roman sacrament,
   We can know little (as we care little)
   Of the Metropolis: her candled churches,
   Her white-gowned pederastic senators,
   The cut-throat factions of her Hippodrome,
   The eunuchs of her draped saloons.
   Here is the frontier, here our camp and place –
   Beans for the pot, fodder for horses,
   And Roman arms. Enough. He who among us
   At full gallop, the bowstring to his ear,
   Lets drive his heavy arrows, to sink
   Stinging through Persian corslets damascened,
   Then follows with the lance – he has our love.
   The Christ bade Holy Peter sheathe his sword,
   Being outnumbered by the Temple guard.
   And this was prudence, the cause not yet lost
   While Peter might persuade the crowd to rescue.
   Peter renegued, breaking his sacrament.
   With us the penalty is death by stoning,
   Not to be made a bishop.
   In Peter’s Church there is no faith nor truth,
   Nor justice anywhere in palace or court.
   That we continue watchful on the rampart
   Concerns no priest. A gaping silken dragon,
   Puffed by the wind, suffices us for God.
   We, not the City, are the Empire’s soul:
   A rotten tree lives only in its rind.
   CALLOW CAPTAIN
   The sun beams jovial from an ancient sky,
   Flooding the round hills with heroic spate.
   A callow captain, glaring, sword at thigh,
   Trots out his charger through the camp gate.
   Soon comes the hour, his marriage hour, and soon
   He fathers children, reigns with ancestors
   Who, likewise serving in the wars, won
   For a much-tattered flag renewed honours.
   A wind ruffles the book, and he whose name
   Was mine vanishes; all is at an end.
   Fortunate soldier: to be spared shame
   Of chapter-years unprofitable to spend,
   To ride off into reticence, nor throw
   Before the story-sun a long shadow.
   THE STRANGER
   He noted from the hill top,
   Fixing a cynic eye upon
   The stranger in the distance
   Up the green track approaching,
   She had a sure and eager tread;
   He guessed mere grace of body
   Which would not for unloveliness
   Of cheek or mouth or other feature
   Retribution pay.
   He watched as she came closer,
   And half-incredulously saw
   How lovely her face also,
   Her hair, her naked hands.
   Come closer yet, deception!
   But closer as she came, the more
   Unarguable her loveliness;
   He frowned and blushed, confessing slowly,
   No, it was no cheat.
   To find her foolish-hearted
   Would rid his baffled thought of her;
   But there was wisdom in that brow
   Of who might be a Muse.
   Then all abashed he dropped his head:
   For in his summer haughtiness
   He had cried lust at her for whom
   Through many deaths he had kept vigil,
   Wakeful for her voice.
   THE SMOKY HOUSE
   He woke to a smell of smoke.
   The house was burning.
   His room-mates reassured him:
   ‘Smouldering, not burning.’
   ‘Break no window,’ they warned,
   ‘Make no draught:
   Nobody wants a blaze.’
   Choking, they laughed
   At such a stubborn fellow
   Unresigned to smoke,
   To sore lungs and eyes –
   For them a joke –
   Yet who would not consent,
   At a cry or curse,
   That water on the smoulder
   Made the smoke worse.
   VARIABLES OF GREEN
   Grass-green and aspen-green,
   Laurel-green and sea-green,
   Fine-emerald-green,
   And many another hue:
   As green commands the variables of green
   So love my loves of you.
   THE GOBLET
   From this heroic skull buried
   Secretly in a tall ant-castle,
   Drawn out, stripped of its jawbone, blanched
   In sun all the hot summer,
   Mounted with bands of hammered gold,
   The eye-holes paned with crystal –
   From this bright skull, a hero’s goblet now,
   What wine is to drink?
   A dry draught, medicinal,
   Not the sweet must that flowed
   Too new between these lips
   When here were living lips,
   That pampered tongue
   When here was tasting tongue.
   But who shall be the drinker?
   That passionate man, his rival
   In endless love and battle,
   Who overcame him at the end?
   Or I, the avenging heir? I taste
   Wine from a dead man’s head
   Whose griefs were not my own?
   If I this skull a goblet made
   It was a pious duty, nothing more.
   Here is clean bone, and gold and crystal,
   So may the ghost sigh gratitude
   To drink his death, as I would mine.
   FIEND, DRAGON, MERMAID
   The only Fiend, religious adversary,
   Ceased in the end to plague me, dying
   By his own hand on a scarred mountain-top
   Full in my sight. His valedictory
   Was pity for me as for one whose house,
   Swept and garnished, now lay open
   As hospice for a score of lesser devils:
   I had no better friend than him, he swore.
   His extreme spasms were of earthquake force –
   They hurled me without sense on the sharp rocks;
   The corpse, ridiculous – that long, thin neck,
   Those long, thin, hairy legs, the sawdust belly –
   This same was Hell’s prince in his prime,
   And lamed me in his fall.
   Next of the ancient dragon I was freed
   Which was an emanation of my fears
   And in the Fiend’s wake followed always.
   An acid breeze puffed at his wings: he flew
   Deathward in cloudy blue and gold, frightful,
   Yet showing patches of webbed nothingness
   Like soap-bubbles before they burst –
   Which was a cause for smiling.
   Furious, he glared: ‘Confess, my dragon glory
   Was a resplendency that seared the gaze –
   All else mere candle-light and glowing ember!’
   The mermaid last, with long hair combed and coiled
   And childish-lovely face, swam slowly by.
   She called my name, pleading an answer,
   Yet knew that though my blood is salty still
   It swings to other tides than the old sea.
   ‘Greedy mermaid, are there no mariners
   To plunge into green water when you sing,
   That you should stretch your arms for me?
   Fain to forget all winds and weathers
   And perish in your beauty?’ So she turned
   With tears, affecting innocence:
   ‘Proud heart, where shall you find again
   So kind a breast as pillow for your woes,
   Or such soft lips? Your peace was my love’s care.’
   ‘Peace is no dream of mariners,’ I said.
   She dived; and quit of dragon, Fiend and her
   I turned my gaze to the encounter of
   The later genius, who of my pride and fear
   And love
   No monster made but me.
   FRAGMENT OF A LOST POEM
   O the clear moment, when from the mouth
   A word flies, current immediately
   Among friends; or when a loving gift astounds
   As the identical wish nearest the heart;
   Or when a stone, volleyed in sudden danger,
   Strikes the rabid beast full on the snout!
   Moments in never….
   GALATEA AND PYGMALION
   Galatea, whom his furious chisel
   From Parian stone had by greed enchanted,
   Fulfilled, so they say, Pygmalion’s longings:
   Stepped from the pedestal on which she stood,
   Bare in his bed laid her down, lubricious,
   With low responses to his drunken raptures,
   Enroyalled his body with her demon blood.
   Alas, Pygmalion had so well plotted
   The articulation of his woman monster
   That schools of eager connoisseurs beset
   Her single person with perennial suit;
   Whom she (a judgement on the jealous artist)
   Admitted rankly to a comprehension
   Of themes that crowned her own, not his repute.
   THE DEVIL’S ADVICE TO STORY-TELLERS
   Lest men suspect your tale to be untrue,
   Keep probability – some say – in view.
   But my advice to story-tellers is:
   Weigh out no gross of probabilities,
   Nor yet make diligent transcriptions of
   Known instances of virtue, crime or love.
   To forge a picture that will pass for true,
   Do conscientiously what liars do –
   Born liars, not the lesser sort that raid
   The mouths of others for their stock-in-trade:
   Assemble, first, all casual bits and scraps
   That may shake down into a world perhaps;
   People this world, by chance created so,
   With random persons whom you do not know –
   The teashop sort, or travellers in a train
   Seen once, guessed idly at, not seen again;
   Let the erratic course they steer surprise
   
 
 Complete Poems 3 (Robert Graves Programme) Page 35