Read Collected Poems 1931-74 Online
Authors: Lawrence Durrell
(1937)
This boy is the good shepherd.
He paces the impartial horizons,
Forty days in the land of tombs,
Waterless wilderness, seeking waterholes:
Knows the sound of the golden eagle, knows
The algebraic flute blue under Jupiter:
Supine in myrtle, lamb between his knees,
Has been a musical lion upon the midnight.
This was the good shepherd, Daphnis,
Time's ante-room by the Aegean tooth,
Curled like an umber snake above the spray,
Mumbling arbutus among the chalk-snags,
The Grecian molars where the green sea spins,
Suffered a pastoral decay.
This girl was the milk and the honey.
Under the eaves the dark figs ripen,
The leaves' nine medicines, a climbing wine.
Under the tongue the bee-sting,
Under the breast the adder at the lung,
Like feathered child at wing.
Life's honey is distilled simplicity:
The icy crystal pendant from the rock,
The turtle's scorching ambush for the egg,
The cypress and the cicada,
And wine-dark, blue, and curious, then,
The metaphoric sea.
This was Chloe, the milk and honey,
Carved in the clear geography of Time,
The skeleton clean chiselled out in chalk,
For our Nigerian brown to study on.
From the disease of life, took the pure way,
Declined into the cliffs, the European waters,
Suffered a pastoral decay.
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1941
Fangbrand was here once,
A missionary man,
Borne down by the Oxus,
Pursued by the lilies,
Inhabited by the old voice of sorrows,
In a black hat and sanitary boots.
The island recognised him,
Giving no welcome, lying
Trembling among her craters:
The blue circlets of stone,
On a sea blotted with fictions.
He came to the wharf with long oars.
The Ocean's peculiar spelling
Haunts here, cuddled by syllables
In caves perpendicular, a blue recitation
Of water washing the dead,
On the pediments of the statues,
Came the strange man, the solitary man,
Fangbrand the unsuspecting,
Missionary one in thick soles,
Measuring penance by the pipkin,
Step-brother to the gannet,
Travelling the blue bowl of the world,
His virtues in him rough as towels.
His brows that bent like forests
Over the crystal-gazing eyes;
His brows that bent like forests,
A silver hair played on his neck.
He saw this rock and the seal asleep,
With the same mineral stare.
This place he made pastance
For the platonic ass; in this
Cottage by the water supported
The duellers, the twins,
Of argument and confusion,
Alone in a melancholy hat.
Those who come to this pass,
Ask themselves always how
A rock can become a parish,
Pulpits whitened by the sea-birds,
Mean more than just house, rock,
A tree, a table and a chair.
His window was Orion;
At night standing upon the deep,
His eyes smaller than commas
Watched without regret the ships
Passing, one light in a void,
One pure point on the wave's floor.
Measured in the heart's small flask
The spirit's disturbance: the one voice
Saying âRenounce', the other
Answering âBe'; the division
Of the darkness into faces
Crying âToo late' âToo late'.
At night the immediate
Rubbing of the ocean on stones,
The headlands dim in her smoke
And always the awareness
Of self like a point, the quiver
As of a foetal heart asleep in him.
Continuous memory, continual evocations.
An old man in a colony of stones,
Frowning, exilic, upon a thorn,
Learning nothing of time:
Sometimes in a windy night asleep
His lips brushed the forbidden apples.
Everything reproached him, the cypress
Revising her reflection in pools,
The olive's stubborn silver in wind,
The nude and statuary hills all
Saying âTurn back. Turn back.
Peace lies another way, old man'.
It seemed to him here at last
His age, his time, his sex even
Were struck and past; life
In a flood carrying all idols
Into the darkness, struck
Like floating tubs, and were gone.
The pathfinder rested now,
The sick man found silence
Like the curved ear of a shell;
A roar of silence even
Diminishing the foolish cool
Haunting note of the dove.
By day he broke his fruit
Humbly from the tree: his water
From wells as deep as Truth:
Living on snails and waterberries,
Marvelling for the first time
At the luminous island, the light.
His body he left in pools
Now dazed by fortune, like an old
White cloth discarded where
Only the fish were visitors.
Their soft perverted kisses
Melted the water on his side.
The rich shadow of the vine's tent
Like a cold cloth on his skull;
Spring water blown through sand,
Bubbled on mineral floors,
Ripened in smooth cisterns
Dripped from a hairy lintel on his tongue.
Truth's metaphor is the needle,
The magnetic north of purpose
Striving against the true north
Of self: Fangbrand found it out,
The final dualism in very self,
An old man holding an asphodel.
Everywhere night lay spilled,
Like coolness from spoons,
And his to drink, the human
Surface of the sky, the planes
And concaves of the eye reflecting
A travelling mirror, the earth.
He regarded himself in water,
The torrid brow's beetle,
The grammarian's cranium-bone.
He regarded himself in water
Saying âX marks the spot,
Self, you are still alive!'
From now the famous ten-year
Silence fell on him; disciples
Invented the legend; now
They search the white island
For a book perhaps, a small
Paper of revelation left behind.
Comb out the populous waters,
Study the mud: what kept,
Held, fed, fattened him?
The hefts of stone are the only
Blossoms here: nothing grows,
But the ocean expunges.
Time's chemicals mock the hunter
For crumbs of doctrine; Fangbrand
Died with his art like a vase.
The grave in the rock,
Sweetened by saffron, bubbles water
Like a smile, an animal truth.
Death interrupted nothing.
Like guarded towns against alarms,
Our sentries in the nerves
Never sleep; but his one night
Slept on their arms, Hesperus shining,
And the unknowns entered.
So the riders of the darkness pass
On their circuit: the luminous island
Of the self trembles and waits,
Waits for us all, my friends,
Where the sea's big brush recolours
The dying lives, and the unborn smiles.
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1941
The islands which whisper to the ambitious,
Washed all winter by the surviving stars
Are here hardly recalled: or only as
Stone choirs for the sea-bird,
Stone chairs for the statues of fishermen.
This civilized valley was dedicated to
The cult of the circle, the contemplation
And correction of famous maladies
Which the repeating flesh has bred in us also
By a continuous babyhood, like the worm in meat.
The only disorder is in what we bring here:
Cars drifting like leaves over the glades,
The penetration of clocks striking in London.
The composure of dolls and fanatics,
Financed migrations to the oldest sources:
A theatre where redemption was enacted,
Repentance won, the stones heavy with dew.
The olive signs the hill, signifying revival,
And the swallow's cot in the ruin seems how
Small yet defiant an exaggeration of love!
Here we can carry our own small deaths
With the resignation of place and identity;
A temple set severely like a dice
In the vale's Vergilian shade; once apparently
Ruled from the whitest light of the summer:
A formula for marble when the clouds
Troubled the architect, and the hill spoke
Volumes of thunder, the sibyllic god wept.
Here we are safe from everything but ourselves,
The dying leaves and the reports of love.
The land's lie, held safe from the sea,
Encourages the austerity of the grass chambers,
Provides a context understandably natural
For men who could divulge the forms of gods.
Here the mathematician entered his own problem,
A house built round his identity,
Round the fond yet mysterious seasons
Of green grass, the teaching of summer-astronomy.
Here the lover made his calculations by ferns,
And the hum of the chorus enchanted.
We, like the winter, are only visitors,
To prosper here the breathing grass,
Encouraging petals on a terrace, disturbing
Nothing, enduring the sun like girls
In a town window. The earth's flowers
Blow here original with every spring,
Shines in the rising of a man's age
Into cold texts and precedents for time.
Everything is a slave to the ancestor, the order
Of old captains who sleep in the hill.
Then smile, my dear, above the holy wands,
Make the indefinite gesture of the hands,
Unlocking this world which is not our world.
The somnambulists walk again in the north
With the long black rifles, to bring us answers.
Useless a morality for slaves: useless
The shouting at echoes to silence them.
Most useless inhabitants of the kind blue air,
Four ragged travellers in Homer.
All causes end within the great Because.
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No milestones marked the invaders,
But ragged harps like mountains here:
A text for Proserpine in tears: worlds
With no doors for heroes and no walls with ears:
Yet snow, the anniversary of death.
How did they get here? How enact
This clear severe repentance on a rock,
Where only death converts and the hills
Into a pastoral silence by a lake,
By the blue Fact of the sky forever?
âEnter the dark crystal if you dare
And gaze on Greece.' They came
Smiling, like long reflections of themselves
Upon a sky of fancy. The red shoes
Waited among the thickets and the springs,
In fields of unexploded asphodels,
Neither patient nor impatient, merely
Waited, the born hunter on his ground,
The magnificent and funny Greek.
We will never record it: the black
Choirs of water flowing on moss,
The black sun's kisses opening,
Upon their blindness, like two eyes
Enormous, open in bed against one's own.
Something sang in the firmament.
The past, my friend compelled you,
The charge of habit and love.
The olive in the blood awoke,
The stones of Athens in their pride
Will remember, regret and often bless.
Kisses in letters from home:
Crosses in the snow: now surely
Lover and loved exist again
By a strange communion of darkness.
Those who went in all innocence,
Whom the wheel disfigured: whom
Charity will not revisit or repair,
The innocent who fell like apples.
Consider how love betrays us:
In the conversation of the prophets
Who daily repaired the world
By profit and loss, with no text
On the unknown quantity
By whose possession all problems
Are only ink and air made words:
I mean friends everywhere who smile
And reach out their hands.
Anger inherits where love
Betrays: iron only can clean:
And praises only crucify the loved
In their matchless errand, death.
Remember the earth will roll
Down her old grooves and spring
Utter swallows again, utter swallows.
Others will inherit the sea-shell,
Murmuring to the foolish its omens,
Uncurving on the drum of the ear,
The vowels of an ocean beyond us,
The history, the inventions of the sea:
Upon all parallels of the salt wave,
To lovers lying like sculptures
In islands of smoke and marble,
Will enter the reflections of poets
By the green wave, the chemical water.
I have no fear for the land
Of the dark heads with aimed noses,
The hair of night and the voices
Which mimic a traditional laughter:
Nor for a new language where
A mole upon a dark throat
Of a girl is called âan olive':
All these things are simply Greece.
Her blue boundaries are
Upon a curving sky of time,
In a dark menstruum of water:
The names of islands like doors
Open upon it: the rotting walls
Of the European myth are here
For us, the industrious singers,
In the service of this blue, this enormous blue.
Soon it will be spring. Out of
This huge magazine of flowers, the earth,
We will enchant the house with roses,
The girls with flowers in their teeth,
The olives full of charm: and all of it
Given: can one say that
Any response is enough for those
Who have a woman, an island and a tree?
I only know that this time
More than ever, we must bless
And pity the darling dead: the women
Winding up their hair into sea-shells,
The faces of meek men like dials,
The great overture of the dead playing,
Calling all lovers everywhere in all stations
Who lie on the circumference of ungiven kisses.
Exhausted rivers ending in the sand;
Windmills of the old world winding
And unwinding in musical valleys your arms.
The contemptible vessel of the body lies
Lightly in its muscles like a vine;
Covered the nerves: and like an oil expressed
From the black olive between rocks,
Memory lulls and bathes in its dear reflections.
Now the blue lantern of the night
Moves on the dark in its context of stars.
O my friend, history with all her compromises
Cannot disturb the circuit made by this,
Alone in the house, a single candle burning
Upon a table in the whole of Greece.
Your letter of the 4th was no surprise.
So Tonio had gone? He will have need of us.
The sails are going out over the old world.
Our happiness, here on a promontory,
Marked by a star, is small but perfect.
The calculations of the astronomers, the legends
The past believed in could not happen here.
Nothing remains but Joy, the infant Joy
(So quiet the mountain in its shield of snow,
So unconcerned the faces of the birds),
With the unsuspected world somewhere awake,
Born of this darkness, our imperfect sight,
The stirring seed of Nostradamus' rose.
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1941