Complete Works of D.H. Lawrence

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Complete Works of D.H. Lawrence Page 862

by D. H. Lawrence


  Work, work, work,

  rattle, rattle, rattle,

  sit, sit, sit,

  finished, finished, finished —

  Ah no, Ah no! before we finally die

  or see ourselves as we are, and go mad,

  give us back our bodies, for a day, for a single day,

  to stamp the earth and feel the wind, like wakeful men again.

  Oh, even to know the last wild wincing of despair,

  aware at last that our manhood is utterly lost,

  give us back our bodies for one day.

  What Have They Done to You?

  What have they done to you, men of the masses

  creeping back and forth to work?

  What have they done to you, the saviours of the people?

  Oh what have they saved you from?

  Alas, they have saved you from yourself,

  from your own body, saved you from living your own life.

  And given you this jig-jig-jig

  tick-tick-ticking of machines,

  this life which is no-man’s-life.

  Oh a no-man’s-life in a no-man’s-land

  this is what they’ve given you

  in place of your own life.

  The People

  Ah the people, the people!

  surely they are flesh of my flesh!

  When, in the streets of the working quarters,

  they stream past, stream past, going to work;

  then, when I see the iron hooked in their faces,

  their poor, their fearful faces,

  then I scream in my soul, for I know I cannot

  cut the iron hook out of their faces, that makes them so drawn,

  nor cut the invisible wires of steel that pull them

  back and forth to work,

  back and forth, to work

  like fearful and corpse-like fishes hooked and being played

  by some malignant fisherman on an unseen, safe shore

  where he does not choose to land them yet, hooked fishes of

  the factory world.

  The Factory Cities

  Oh, over the factory cities there seems to hover a doom

  so dark, so dark, the mind is lost in it.

  Ah, the industrial masses, with the iron hook through their gills,

  when the evil angler has played them long enough,

  another little run for their money, a few more turns of the reel

  fixing the hook more tightly, getting it more firmly in —

  Ah, when he begins to draw the line in tight, to land his fish,

  the industrial masses - Ah, what will happen, what will happen?

  Hark! the strange noise of millions of fish in panic,

  in panic, in rebellion, slithering millions of fish

  whistling and seething and pulling the angler down into boiling

  black death!

  Leaves of Grass, Flowers of Grass

  Leaves of grass, what about leaves of grass?

  Grass blossoms, grass has flowers, flowers of grass,

  dusty pollen of grass, tall grass in its midsummer maleness,

  hay-seed and tiny grain of grass, graminiferae

  not far from the lily, the considerable lily;

  even the blue-grass blossoms;

  even the bison knew it;

  even the stupidest farmer gathers his hay in bloom, in blossom

  just before it seeds.

  Only the best matters; even the cow knows it;

  grass in blossom, blossoming grass, risen to its height and its

  natural pride

  in its own splendour and its own feathery maleness

  the grass, the grass.

  Leaves of grass, what are leaves of grass, when at its best grass

  blossoms?

  Magnificent Democracy

  Oh, when the grass flowers, the grass

  how aristocratic it is!

  Cock’s-foot, fox-tail, fescue and tottering-grass,

  see them wave, see them wave, plumes

  prouder than the Black Prince,

  flowers of grass, fine men.

  Oh, I am a democrat

  of the grass in blossom,

  a blooming aristocrat all round.

  LAST POEMS

  CONTENTS

  THE GREEKS ARE COMING

  THE ARGONAUTS

  MIDDLE OF THE WORLD

  FOR THE HEROES ARE DIPPED IN SCARLET

  DEMIURGE

  THE WORK OF CREATION

  RED GERANIUM AND GODLY MIGNONETTE

  BODILESS GOD

  THE BODY OF GOD

  THE RAINBOW

  MAXIMUS

  THE MAN OF TYRE

  THEY SAY THE SEA IS LOVELESS

  WHALES WEEP NOT!

  INVOCATION TO THE MOON

  BUTTERFLY

  BAVARIAN GENTIANS

  LUCIFER

  THE BREATH OF LIFE

  SILENCE

  THE HANDS OF GOD

  PAX

  ABYSMAL IMMORTALITY

  ONLY MAN

  RETURN OF RETURNS

  STOIC

  IN THE CITIES

  LORD’S PRAYER

  MANA OF THE SEA

  SALT

  THE FOUR

  THE BOUNDARY STONE

  SPILLING THE SALT

  WALK WARILY

  MYSTIC

  ANAXAGORAS

  KISSING AND HORRID STRIFE

  WHEN SATAN FELL

  DOORS

  EVIL IS HOMELESS

  WHAT THEN IS EVIL?

  THE EVIL WORLD-SOUL

  THE WANDERING COSMOS

  DEATH IS NOT EVIL, EVIL IS MECHANICAL

  STRIFE

  THE LATE WAR

  MURDER

  MURDEROUS WEAPONS

  DEPARTURE

  THE SHIP OF DEATH

  DIFFICULT DEATH

  ALL SOULS’ DAY

  THE HOUSELESS DEAD

  BEWARE THE UNHAPPY DEAD!

  AFTER ALL SAINTS’ DAY

  SONG OF DEATH

  THE END, THE BEGINNING

  SLEEP

  SLEEP AND WAKING

  FATIGUE

  FORGET

  KNOW-ALL

  TABERNACLE

  TEMPLES

  SHADOWS

  CHANGE

  PHOENIX

  Lawrence with Willard Johnson and Witter Bynner,Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1922

  THE GREEKS ARE COMING

  LITTLE islands out at sea, on the horizon

  keep suddenly showing a whiteness, a flash and a furl, a hail

  of something coming, ships a-sail from over the rim of the sea.

  And every time, it is ships, it is ships

  it is ships of Cnossos coming, out of the morning and the sea,

  it is Aegean ships, and men with archaic pointed beards

  coming out of the Eastern end.

  But it is far-off foam.

  And an ocean liner, going east, like a small beetle walking the edge

  is leaving a long thread of dark smoke

  like a bad smell.

  THE ARGONAUTS

  THEY are not dead, they are not dead!

  Now that the sun, like a lion, licks his paws

  and goes slowly down the hill:

  now that the moon, who remembers, and only cares

  that we should be lovely in the flesh, with bright, crescent feet,

  pauses near the crest of the hill, climbing slowly, like a queen

  looking down on the lion as he retreats.

  Now the sea is the Argonauts’ sea, and in the dawn

  Odysseus calls the commands, as he steers past those foamy islands

  wait, wait, don’t bring the coffee yet, nor the pain grille.

  The dawn is not off the sea, and Odysseus’ ships

  have not yet passed the islands, I must watch them still.

  MIDDLE OF THE WORLD

  THIS sea will never die, neither will it ever grow old

  nor cease to b
e blue, nor in the dawn

  cease to lift up its hills

  and let the slim black ship of Dionysos come sailing in

  with grape-vines up the mast, and dolphins leaping.

  What do I care if the smoking ships

  of the P. & O. and the Orient Line and all the other stinkers

  cross like clock-work the Minoan distance!

  They only cross, the distance never changes.

  And now that the moon who gives men glistening bodies

  is in her exaltation, and can look down on the sun

  I see descending from the ships at dawn

  slim naked men from Gnossos, smiling the archaic smile

  of those that will without fail come back again,

  and kindling little fires upon the shores

  and crouching, and speaking the music of lost languages.

  And the Minoan Gods, and the Gods of Tiryns

  are heard softly laughing and chatting, as ever;

  and Dionysos, young, and a stranger

  leans listening on the gate, in all respect.

  FOR THE HEROES ARE DIPPED IN SCARLET

  BEFORE Plato told the great lie of ideals

  men slimly went like fishes, and didn’t care.

  They had long hair, like Samson,

  and clean as arrows they sped at the mark

  when the bow-cord twanged.

  They knew it was no use knowing

  their own nothingness:

  for they were not nothing.

  So now they come back! Hark!

  Hark! the low and shattering laughter of bearded men

  with the slim waists of warriors, and the long feet

  of moon-lit dancers.

  Oh, and their faces scarlet, like the dolphin’s blood!

  Lo! the loveliest is red all over, rippling vermilion

  as he ripples upwards!

  laughing in his black beard!

  They are dancing! they return, as they went, dancing!

  For the thing that is done without the glowing as of vermilion,

  were best not done at all.

  How glistening red they are!

  DEMIURGE

  THEY say that reality exists only in the spirit

  that corporal existence is a kind of death

  that pure being is bodiless

  that the idea of the form precedes the form substantial.

  But what nonsense it is!

  as if any Mind could have imagined a lobster

  dozing the under-deeps, then reaching out a savage and iron claw!

  Even the mind of God can only imagine

  those things that have become themselves:

  bodies and presences, here and now, creatures with a foothold

  in creation

  even if it is only a lobster on tiptoe.

  Religion knows better than philosophy

  Religion knows that Jesus never was Jesus

  till he was born from a womb, and ate soup and bread

  and grew up, and became, in the wonder of creation, Jesus,

  with a body and with needs, and a lovely spirit.

  THE WORK OF CREATION

  THE mystery of creation is the divine urge of creation,

  but it is a great strange urge, it is not a Mind.

  Even an artist knows that his work was never in his mind,

  he could never have thought it before it happened.

  A strange ache possessed him, and he entered the struggle,

  and out of the struggle with his material, in the spell of the urge

  his work took place, it came to pass, it stood up and saluted

  his mind.

  God is a great urge, wonderful, mysterious, magnificent

  but he knows nothing beforehand.

  His urge takes shape in flesh, and lo!

  it is creation! God looks himself on it in wonder, for the first time.

  Lo! there is a creature, formed! How strange!

  Let me think about it! Let me form an idea!

  RED GERANIUM AND GODLY MIGNONETTE

  IMAGINE that any mind ever thought a red geranium!

  As if the redness of a red geranium could be anything but a

  sensual experience

  and as if sensual experience could take place before there were

  any senses.

  We know that even God could not imagine the redness of a

  red geranium

  nor the smell of mignonette

  when geraniums were not, and mignonette neither.

  And even when they were, even God would have to have a nose

  to smell at the mignonette.

  You can’t imagine the Holy Ghost sniffing at cherry-pie heliotrope.

  Or the Most High, during the coal age, cudgelling his mighty brains

  even if he had any brains: straining his mighty mind

  to think, among the moss and mud of lizards and mastodons

  to think out, in the abstract, when all was twilit green and muddy:

  “ Now there shall be tum-tiddly-um, and tum-tiddly um,

  hey-presto! scarlet geranium! “

  We know it couldn’t be done.

  But imagine, among the mud and the mastodons

  god sighing and yearning with tremendous creative yearning,

  in that dark green mess

  oh, for some other beauty, some other beauty

  that blossomed at last, red geranium, and mignonette.

  BODILESS GOD

  EVERYTHING that has beauty has a body, and is a body;

  everything that has being has being in the flesh:

  and dreams are only drawn from the bodies that are.

  And God?

  Unless God has a body, how can he have a voice

  and emotions, and desires, and strength, glory or honour?

  For God, even the rarest God, is supposed to love us

  and wish us to be this that and the other.

  And he is supposed to be mighty and glorious.

  THE BODY OF GOD

  GOD is the great urge that has not yet found a body

  but urges towards incarnation with the great creative urge.

  And becomes at last a clove carnation: lo! that is god!

  and becomes at last Helen, or Ninon: any lovely and generous woman

  at her best and her most beautiful, being god, made manifest,

  any clear and fearless man being god, very god.

  There is no god

  apart from poppies and the flying fish,

  men singing songs, and women brushing their hair in the sun.

  The lovely things are god that has come to pass, like Jesus came.

  The rest, the undiscoverable, is the demiurge.

  THE RAINBOW

  EVEN the rainbow has a body

  made of the drizzling rain

  and is an architecture of glistening atoms

  built up, built up

  yet you can’t lay your hand on it,

  nay, nor even your mind.

  MAXIMUS

  GOD is older than the sun and moon

  and the eye cannot behold him

  nor voice describe him.

  But a naked man, a stranger, leaned on the gate

  with his cloak over his arm, waiting to be asked in.

  So I called him: Gome in, if you will! —

  He came in slowly, and sat down by the hearth.

  I said to him: And what is your name? —

  He looked at me without answer, but such a loveliness

  entered me, I smiled to myself, saying: He is God!

  So he said: Hermes!

  God is older than the sun and moon

  and the eye cannot behold him

  nor the voice describe him:

  and still, this is the God Hermes, sitting by my hearth.

  THE MAN OF TYRE

  THE man of Tyre went down to the sea

  pondering, for he was a Greek, that God is one and all alone

  and ever
more shall be so.

  And a woman who had been washing clothes in the pool of rock

  where a stream came down to the gravel of the sea and sank in,

  who had spread white washing on the gravel banked above the bay,

  who had lain her shift on the shore, on the shingle slope,

  who had waded to the pale green sea of evening, out to a shoal,

  pouring sea-water over herself

  now turned, and came slowly back, with her back to the evening sky.

  Oh lovely, lovely with the dark hair piled up, as she went deeper,

  deeper down the channel, then rose shallower, shallower,

  with the full thighs slowly lifting of the wader wading shore- wards

  and the shoulders pallid with light from the silent sky behind

  both breasts dim and mysterious, with the glamorous kindness

  of twilight between them

  and the dim notch of black maidenhair like an indicator,

  giving a message to the man —

  So in the cane-brake he clasped his hands in delight

  that could only be god-given, and murmured:

  Lo! God is one god! But here in the twilight

  godly and lovely comes Aphrodite out of the sea

  towards me!

  THEY SAY THE SEA IS LOVELESS

  THEY say the sea is loveless, that in the sea

  love cannot live, but only bare, salt splinters

  of loveless life.

  But from the sea

  the dolphins leap round Dionysos’ ship

  whose masts have purple vines,

  and up they come with the purple dark of rainbows

  and flip! they go! with the nose-dive of sheer delight;

  and the sea is making love to Dionysos

  in the bouncing of these small and happy whales.

 

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