Read Collected Poems 1931-74 Online
Authors: Lawrence Durrell
Something like the sea,
Unlaboured momentum of water
But going somewhere,
Building and subsiding,
The busy one, the loveless.
Or the wind that slits
Forests from end to end,
Inspiriting vast audiences,
Ovations of leafy hands
Accepting, accepting.
But neither is yet
Fine enough for the line I hunt.
The dry bony blade of the
Sword-grass might suit me
Better: an assassin of polish.
Such a bite of perfect temper
As unwary fingers provoke,
Not to be felt till later,
Turning away, to notice the thread
Of blood from its unfelt stroke.
1955/
1955
To
My
Godson
Rupert
Burrows
Indifferent history! In such a place
Can we choose what really matters most?
Three hundred oars munched up the gulf.
A tyrant fell. The wise men turned their beds
To face the Eastâthis was war. Or else
Eating and excreting raised to the rank of arts:
Sporting the broad purpleâthis was peace,
For demagogues exhausted by sensations.
From covens of delight they brought
The silver lampreys served on deathless chargers
By cooks of polity and matchless tact.
Only their poets differed in being free
From the historic consciousness and its
Defeats: wise servants of the magnet and
The sieve, against this human backdrop told
The truth in oracles and never asked themselves
In what or why they never could believe.
1955/
1955
I recall her by a freckle of gold
In the pupil of one eye, an odd
Strawberry-gold: and after many years
Of forgetting that musical bodyâ
Arms too long, wrists too slenderâ
Remember only the unstable wishes
Disquieting the flesh. I will not
Deny her pomp was laughable, urban:
Behind it one could hear the sad
Provincial laughter rotted by insomnia.
None of these meetings are planned,
I guess, or willed by the exemplars
Of a city's loveâa city founded in
The name of love: to me is always
Brown face, white teeth, cheap summer frock
In green and white stripes and then
Forever a strawberry eye. I recalled no more
For years. The eye was lying in wait.
Then in another city from the same
Twice-used air and sheets, in the midst
Of a parting: the same dark bedroom,
Arctic chamber-pot and cruel iron bed,
I saw the street-lamp unpick Theodora
Like an old sweater, unwrinkle eyes and mouth,
Unbandaging her youth to let me see
The wounds I had not understood before.
How could I have ignored such wounds?
The bloody sweepings of a loving smile
Strewed like Osiris among the dunes?
Now only my experience recognizes her
Too late, among the other great survivors
Of the city's rage, and places her among
The champions of loveâamong the true elect!
1955/
1955
âNo one will ever pick them, I think,
The ugly off-white clusters: all the grace
Lies in the name of death named.
Are they a true certificate for death?'
   âI wonder'
âYou might say that once the sages,
Death being identified, forgave it language:
Called it “asphodel”, as who should say
The synonym for scentless, colourless,
   Solitary,
Rock-loving â¦' âMemory is all of these.'
âYes, they asserted the discipline of memory,
Which admits of no relapse in its
Consignment, does not keep forever.'
   âNor does death.'
âYou mean our dying?' âNo, but when one is
Alone, neither happy nor unhappy, in
The deepest ache of reason where this love
Becomes a malefactor, clinging so,
   You surely knowâ'
âDeath's stock will stand no panic,
Be beautiful in jars or on a coffin,
Exonerate the flesh when it has turned
Or mock the enigma with an epitaph
   It never earned.'
âThese quite precisely guard ironic truth,
And you may work your way through every
Modulation of the rose, to fill your jars
With pretty writing-stuff: but for deathâ'
   âTruly, always give us
These comfortless, convincing, even, yes,
A little mocking, Grecian asphodels.'
1955/
1955
O Freedom which to every man entire
Presents imagined longings to his fire,
To swans the water, bees the honey-cell,
To bats the dark, to lovers loving well,
Only to the wise may you
Restricting and confining be,
All who half-delivered from themselves
Suffer your conspiracy,
Freedom, Freedom, prison of the free.
1956/
1956
Her sea limps up here twice a day
And sigh by leaden sigh deposes
Crude granite hefts and sponges
Sucked smooth as foreheads or as noses;
No footprints dove the labouring sand,
For terrene clays bake smooth
But coarse as a gipsy's hand.
A rose in an abandoned well,
The sexless babble of a spring,
A carob's torn and rosy flesh,
A vulture sprawling on a cliff
Will tell the traveller nothing.
The double axe, the double sex,
The noble mystery of the doves,
Before men sorted out their loves
By race and gender chose
One from these dying groves.
This much the sea limps in to touch
With old confining foam-born hand
While lovers seeking nothing much
Or hunting the many through the one
May taste in its reproachful roar
The ancient relish of her sun.
1966/
1956
(1955)
Veronese grey! Here in the Octagon Room
Our light ruffles and decodes
Greys of cigar-ash or river clay
Into the textual plumage of a mindâ
Paulo, all his Muses held
Quietly in emulsion up against
A pane of cockney sky.
It is not only the authority
Of godly sensual forms which pity
And overwhelm usâthis grey copied
From eyes I no more see,
Recording every shade of pain, yes,
All it takes to give smiles
The deathly candour of a dying art,
Or worth to words exchanged in darkness:
Is it only the dead who have such eyes?
No, really,
I think it is the feudal calm
Of sensuality enjoyed without aversion
Or regret ⦠(incident of the ring
Lost in the grass: her laughter).
I should have been happy
In these rainy streets, a captive still
Like all these glittering hostages
We carried out of Italy, canvases
Riding the cracking winds in great London
Parks: happy or unhappy, who can tell you?
Only Veronese grey walks backwards
In the past across my mind
To where tugs still howl and mumble
On the father river,
And the grey feet passing, quiver
On pavements greyer than his greys â¦
Less wounding perhaps because the belongers
Loved here, died here, and took their art
Like love, with a pinch of salt, yes
Their pain clutched in the speechless
Deathless calm of Method. Gods!
1960/
1956
First come the Infantry in scented bodices,
Deployed, and after them the Birdwomen,
(The Ladies Air Arm) clad in shirts of male,
And riding gravid chargers shod with spurs.
In shrill capitulation like some endless wife.
After them in rumbling families
Symbolic engines only found in Jung,
Bombs polished on the lathe like eggs,
Grey mammary tanks, forceps and hooks with eyes,
Unbuttoned panzers, huge uncircumcised artillery,
Grave in procession rustle past the stand.
âOne age, one land, one leader and one sex.'
1980/
1957
Here is a man who says: Let there be light.
Let who is dressed in hair walk upright,
The house give black smoke, the children
Be silenced by fire and apples. Let
A sedative evening bring steaming cattle
The domestic kettle, contagion of sleep,
Deeper purer surer even than Eden.
Twin tides speak making of two three
By fission by fusion, a logarithmic sea.
What was bitter in the apple is eaten deep,
Rust sleeps in the steel, canker will keep.
Let one plus one quicken and be two,
Keep silence that silence keep you.
1960/
1960
Night falls. The dark expresses
Roll back their iron scissors to commence
Precision of the wheels' elision
From whose dark serial jabber sparks
Swing swaying through the mournful capitals
And in these lighted cages sleep
With open eyes the passengers
Each committed to his private folly,
On hinges of wanhope the long
Sleeping shelves of men and women,
A library of maggots dreaming, rolls.
Some retiring to their sleeping past,
On clicking pillows feel the flickering peep
Of lighted memories, keys slipped in grooves
Parted like lips receiving or resisting kisses.
Pillars of smoke expend futurity.
This is how it is for me, for you
It must be different lying awake to hear
At a garden's end the terrible club-foot
Crashing among iron spars, the female shrieks,
Love-song of steel and the consenting night.
To feel the mocking janitor, sleep,
Shake now and wake to lean there
On a soft elbow seeing where we race
A whiplash curving outwards to the stars,
A glowing coal to light the lamps of space.
1960/
1960
Miss Willow, secretly known as âtit' â¦
Plotkin who slipped on new ice
And wounded the stinks master
The winter when the ponds froze over â¦
Square roots of the symbol Abraham
Cut off below the burning bush,
Or in the botany classes heads
Drying between covers like rare ferns,
Stamen and pistil, we were young then.
Later with tunes like âHips and Whores'
The song-book summed us up,
Mixing reality with circumstance,
With Hotchkiss cock of the walk
Top button undone, and braided cap,
He was the way and the life.
What dismays is not time
Assuaging every thirst with a surprise,
Bitterness hidden in desiring bodies,
Unfolded strictly, governed by the germ.
Plotkin cooked like a pie in iron lungs:
Glass rods the doctors dipped in burning nitrates
Dripped scalding on in private hospitals
And poor âtit' Willow who had been
Young, pretty and perhaps contemptuous
Dreaming of love, was carried to Spain in a cage.
1960/
1960
I like to see so much the old man's loves,
Egregious if you like and often shabby
Protruding from the ass's skin of verse,
For better or for worse,
The bones of poems cultured by a thirstâ
Dilapidated taverns, dark eyes washed
Now in the wry and loving brilliance
Of such barbaric memories
As held them when the dyes of passion ran.
No cant about the sottishness of man!
The forest of dark eyes he mused upon,
Out of ikons, waking beside his own
In stuffy brothels, on stained mattresses,
Watched by the melting vision of the flesh;
Eros the tutor of our callowness
Deployed like ants across his ageing flesh
The crises of great art, the riders
Of love, their bloody lariats whistling,
The cries locked in the quickened breath,
The love-feast of a sort of love-in-death.
And here I find him great. Never
To attempt a masterpiece of sizeâ
You must leave life for that. No
But always to preserve the adventive
Minute, never to destroy the truth,
Admit the coarse manipulations of the lie.
If only the brown fingers franking his love
Could once be fixed in art, the immortal
Episode be recordedâ
there
he would awake
On a fine day to shed his acts like scabs,
The trespasses on life and living slake
In the taste, not of his death but of his dying:
And like the rest of us he died still trying.
1964/
1960