A Ted Hughes Bestiary

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A Ted Hughes Bestiary Page 11

by Ted Hughes


  He forced my mouth wide,

  Plucked out my own cunning

  Garrulous evil tongue,

  And with bloody fingers

  Between by frozen lips

  Inserted the fork of a wise serpent.

  He split my chest with a blade,

  Wrenched my heart from its hiding,

  And into the open wound

  Dropped a flaming coal.

  I lay on stones like a corpse.

  There God’s voice came to me:

  ‘Stand, Prophet, you are my will.

  Be my witness. Go

  Through all seas and lands. With the Word

  Burn the hearts of the people.’

  after the Russian by ALEXANDER PUSHKIN

  Acknowledgements

  I’m grateful to Carol Hughes and Paul Keegan for their help in assembling this book and to Martha Sprackland for overseeing its production.

  ALSO BY TED HUGHES

  Poetry

  The Hawk in the Rain

  Lupercal

  Wodwo

  Crow

  Gaudete

  Flowers and Insects

  Moortown

  Moortown Diary

  Wolfwatching

  Rain-Charm for the Duchy

  Three Books: Remains of Elmet, Cave Birds, River

  Elmet (with photographs by Fay Godwin)

  New Selected Poems 1957–1994

  Birthday Letters

  Collected Poems

  Translations

  Seneca’s Oedipus

  Wedekind’s Spring Awakening

  Lorca’s Blood Wedding

  Tales from Ovid

  Racine’s Phèdre

  Euripides’ Alcestis

  The Oresteia of Aeschylus

  Selected Translations (edited by Daniel Weissbort)

  Selections

  Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson

  Selected Verse of Shakespeare

  A Choice of Coleridge’s Verse

  The Rattle Bag (edited with Seamus Heaney)

  The School Bag (edited with Seamus Heaney)

  Prose

  Poetry in the Making

  A Dancer to God

  Shakespeare and the Goddess of Complete Being

  Winter Pollen: Occasional Prose

  Difficulties of a Bridegroom

  Letters of Ted Hughes (edited by Christopher Reid)

  A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Ted Hughes (1930–1998) was born in Mytholmroyd, England, and produced more than forty books of poetry, prose, drama, translation, and children’s literature. His first book, The Hawk in the Rain, was published in 1957, and his last collection, Birthday Letters, was named the Whitbread Book of the Year in 1998 and won the Forward Prize and the T. S. Eliot Prize. He was appointed Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom in 1984. You can sign up for email updates here.

  A NOTE ABOUT THE EDITOR

  Alice Oswald lives in Devon with her husband and three children. Dart, her second collection of poems, won the T. S. Eliot Prize in 2002. Her most recent collection, Memorial, was awarded the 2013 Warwick Prize for Writing. You can sign up for email updates here.

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  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Introduction

  Four prose excerpts

  from THE HAWK IN THE RAIN (1957)

  The Hawk in the Rain

  The Jaguar

  The Thought-Fox

  The Horses

  Meeting

  from LUPERCAL (1960)

  February

  Esther’s Tomcat

  Hawk Roosting

  The Bull Moses

  View of a Pig

  An Otter

  Thrushes

  Pike

  from RECKLINGS (1966)

  Stealing Trout on a May Morning

  The Lake

  from WODWO (1967)

  Thistles

  Ghost Crabs

  Second Glance at a Jaguar

  Song of a Rat

  Skylarks

  The Howling of Wolves

  Gnat-Psalm

  Wodwo

  from CROW (1970)

  That Moment

  Crow and the Birds

  Crow Tyrannosaurus

  Two Legends

  Lineage

  Examination at the Womb-Door

  Crow’s Fall

  Owl’s Song

  Crow’s Elephant Totem Song

  Littleblood

  from PROMETHEUS ON HIS CRAG (1973)

  ‘Prometheus … Pestered by birds roosting and defecating’

  ‘Prometheus … Began to admire the vulture’

  UNCOLLECTED (1975)

  The Lamentable History of the Human Calf

  from SEASON SONGS (1976)

  Swifts

  Mackerel Song

  Work and Play

  A Cranefly in September

  The Stag

  from GAUDETE (1977)

  ‘Calves harshly parted from their mamas’

  UNCOLLECTED (1978)

  A Solstice

  from ORTS (1978)

  ‘The white shark’

  from CAVE BIRDS (1978)

  Only a Little Sleep, a Little Slumber

  The Owl Flower

  The Risen

  from ADAM AND THE SACRED NINE (1979)

  And the Falcon came

  The Skylark came

  The Wild Duck

  The Swift comes the swift

  The Unknown Wren

  And Owl

  The Dove Came

  The Crow came to Adam

  And the Phoenix has come

  from REMAINS OF ELMET (1979)

  Curlews

  The Weasels We Smoked out of the Bank

  The Canal’s Drowning Black

  The Long Tunnel Ceiling

  Cock-Crows

  from MOORTOWN DIARY (1979)

  Feeding out-wintering cattle at twilight

  Foxhunt

  Roe-deer

  February 17th

  Coming down through Somerset

  While she chews sideways

  Sheep

  from EARTH-NUMB (1979)

  The Lovepet

  UNCOLLECTED (1980)

  Mosquito

  from A PRIMER OF BIRDS (1981)

  Cuckoo

  Swans

  Buzzard

  Snipe

  The Hen

  Mallard

  Evening Thrush

  Treecreeper

  A Dove

  UNCOLLECTED (1982–3)

  Sing the Rat

  Swallows

  from RIVER (1983)

  Under the Hill of Centurions

  Milesian Encounter on the Sligachan

  That Morning

  A Rival

  Performance

  An Eel

  October Salmon

  Visitation

  UNCOLLECTED (1984)

  The Hare I–III

  from FLOWERS AND INSECTS (1986)

  Two Tortoiseshell Butterflies

  In the Likeness of a Grasshopper

  from WOLFWATCHING (1989)

  A Sparrow Hawk

  Wolfwatching

  from TALES FROM OVID (1997)

  from Arachne

  from BIRTHDAY LETTERS (1998)

  The Owl

  The Chipmunk

  Epiphany

  from SELECTED TRANSLATIONS (2006)

  from The Boy Changed into a Stag Cries Out at the Gate of Secrets

  The Prophet

  Acknowledge
ments

  Also by Ted Hughes

  A Note About the Author and Editor

  Copyright

  Farrar, Straus and Giroux

  18 West 18th Street, New York 10011

  Copyright © 2014 by The Estate of Ted Hughes

  Introduction and selection copyright © 2014 by Alice Oswald

  All rights reserved

  Originally published in 2014 by Faber and Faber Ltd., Great Britain

  Published in the United States by Farrar, Straus and Giroux

  First American edition, 2016

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Hughes, Ted, 1930–1998, author. | Oswald, Alice, 1966– editor.

  Title: A Ted Hughes bestiary: poems / Ted Hughes; selected by Alice Oswald.

  Description: First American edition. | New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2016. | “2014

  Identifiers: LCCN 2015048668 | ISBN 9780374272630 (softcover) | ISBN 9780374715434 (ebook)

  Subjects: | BISAC: POETRY / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh.

  Classification: LCC PR6058.U37 A6 2016 | DDC 821/.914—dc23

  LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/201504866

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