New and Selected Poems (13 page)

Read New and Selected Poems Online

Authors: Ted Hughes

Tags: #nepalifiction, #TPB

BOOK: New and Selected Poems
10.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Dawn’s Rose
 
 

Is melting an old frost moon.

 

Agony under agony, the quiet of dust,

And a crow talking to stony skylines.

 

Desolate is the crow’s puckered cry

As an old woman’s mouth

When the eyelids have finished

And the hills continue.

 

A cry

Wordless

As the newborn baby’s grieving

On the steely scales.

 

As the dull gunshot and its after-râle

Among conifers, in rainy twilight.

 

Or the suddenly dropped, heavily dropped

Star of blood on the fat leaf.

 
The Smile
 
 

Began under the groan of the oldest forest

It ran through the clouds, a third light

And it ran through the skin of the earth

 

It came circling the earth

Like the lifted bow

Of a wave’s submarine running

Tossing the willows, and swelling the elm-tops

Looking for its occasion

 

But people were prepared

They met it

With visor smiles, mirrors of ricochet

With smiles that stole a bone

And smiles that went off with a mouthful of blood

And smiles that left poison in a numb place

Or doubled up

Covering a getaway

 

But the smile was too vast, it outflanked all

It was too tiny it slipped between the atoms

So that the steel screeched open

Like a gutted rabbit, the skin was nothing

Then the pavement and the air and the light

Confined all the jumping blood

No better than a paper bag

People were running with bandages

But the world was a draughty gap

The whole creation

Was just a broken gutter pipe

 

And there was the unlucky person’s eye

Pinned under its brow

Widening for the darkness behind it

Which kept right on getting wider, darker

As if the soul were not working

 

And at that very moment the smile arrived

 

And the crowd, shoving to get a glimpse of a man’s soul

Stripped to its last shame,

Met this smile

That rose through his torn roots

Touching his lips, altering his eyes

And for a moment

Mending everything

 

Before it swept out and away across the earth.

 
Crow’s Battle Fury
 
 

When the patient, shining with pain,

Suddenly pales,

Crow makes a noise suspiciously like laughter.

 

Seeing the night-city, on the earth’s blue bulge,

Trembling its tambourine,

He bellows laughter till the tears come.

 

Remembering the painted masks and the looming of the balloons

Of the pinpricked dead

He rolls on the ground helpless.

 

And he sees his remote feet and he chokes he

Holds his aching sides –

He can hardly bear it.

 

One of his eyes sinks into his skull, tiny as a pin,

One opens, a gaping dish of pupils,

His temple-veins gnarl, each like the pulsing head of a month-old baby,

His heels double to the front,

His lips lift off his cheekbone, his heart and his liver fly in his throat,

Blood blasts from the crown of his head in a column –

 

Such as cannot be in this world.

 

A hair’s breadth out of the world

 

He comes forward a step,

                                          and a step,

                                                         and a step –

 
Crow Blacker than Ever
 
 

When God, disgusted with man,

Turned towards Heaven,

And man, disgusted with God,

Turned towards Eve,

Things looked like falling apart.

 

But Crow Crow

Crow nailed them together,

Nailing Heaven and earth together –

 

So man cried, but with God’s voice.

And God bled, but with man’s blood.

 

Then Heaven and earth creaked at the joint

Which became gangrenous and stank –

A horror beyond redemption.

 

The agony did not diminish.

 

Man could not be man nor God God.

 

The agony

 

Grew.

 

Crow

 

Grinned

 

Crying: ‘This is my Creation,’

 

Flying the black flag of himself.

 
Revenge Fable
 
 

There was a person

Could not get rid of his mother

As if he were her topmost twig.

So he pounded and hacked at her

With numbers and equations and laws

Which he invented and called truth.

He investigated, incriminated

And penalized her, like Tolstoy,

Forbidding, screaming and condemning,

Going for her with a knife,

Obliterating her with disgusts

Bulldozers and detergents

Requisitions and central heating

Rifles and whisky and bored sleep. 

 

With all her babes in her arms, in ghostly weepings, She died.

 

His head fell off like a leaf.

 
Bedtime Anecdote
 
 

There was a man

Who got up from a bed that was no bed

Who pulled on his clothes that were no clothes

(A million years whistling in his ear)

And he pulled on shoes that were no shoes

Carefully jerking the laces tight – and tighter

To walk over floors that were no floor

Down stairs that were no stairs

Past pictures that were no pictures

To pause

To remember and forget the night’s dreams that were no dreams

 

And there was the cloud, primeval, the prophet;

There was the rain, its secret writing, the water-kernel

Of the tables of the sun;

And there was the light with its loose rant;

There were the birch trees, insisting and urging.

And the wind, reproach upon reproach.

At the table he cupped his eyes in his hands

As if to say grace

 

Avoiding his reflection in the mirror

Huddled to read news that was no news

(A million years revolving on his stomach)

He entered the circulation of his life

But stopped reading feeling the weight of his hand

In the hand that was no hand

And he did not know what to do or where to begin

To live the day that was no day

 

And Brighton was a picture

The British Museum was a picture

The battleship off Flamborough was a picture

And the drum-music the ice in the glass the mouths

Stretched open in laughter

That was no laughter

Were what was left of a picture

 

In a book

Under a monsoon downpour

In a ruinous mountain hut

 

From which years ago his body was lifted by a leopard.

 
Apple Tragedy
 
 

So on the seventh day

The serpent rested.

God came up to him.

‘I’ve invented a new game,’ he said. 

 

The serpent stared in surprise

At this interloper.

But God said: ‘You see this apple?

I squeeze it and look – Cider.’

 

The serpent had a good drink

And curled up into a questionmark.

Adam drank and said: ‘Be my god.’

Eve drank and opened her legs

 

And called to the cockeyed serpent

And gave him a wild time.

God ran and told Adam

Who in drunken rage tried to hang himself in the orchard.

 

The serpent tried to explain, crying ‘Stop’

But drink was splitting his syllable

And Eve started screeching: ‘Rape! Rape!’

And stamping on his head.

 

Now whenever the snake appears she screeches

‘Here it comes again! Help! O help!’

Then Adam smashes a chair on its head,

And God says: ‘I am well pleased’

 

And everything goes to hell.

 
Crow’s Last Stand
 
 

Burning

                burning

                           burning

                                      there was finally something

The sun could not burn, that it had rendered

Everything down to – a final obstacle

Against which it raged and charred

 

And rages and chars

Limpid among the glaring furnace clinkers

The pulsing blue tongues and the red and the yellow

The green lickings of the conflagration

 

Limpid and black –

 

Crow’s eye-pupil, in the tower of its scorched fort.

 
Fragment of an Ancient Tablet
 
 

Above – the well-known lips, delicately downed.

Below – beard between thighs.

 

Above – her brow, the notable casket of gems.

Below – the belly with its blood-knot.

 

Above – many a painful frown.

Below – the ticking bomb of the future.

 

Above – her perfect teeth, with the hint of a fang at the corner.

Below – the millstones of two worlds.

 

Above – a word and a sigh.

Below – gouts of blood and babies.

 

Above – the face, shaped like a perfect heart.

Below – the heart’s torn face.

 
Lovesong
 
 

He loved her and she loved him

His kisses sucked out her whole past and future or tried to

He had no other appetite

She bit him she gnawed him she sucked

She wanted him complete inside her

Safe and sure forever and ever

Their little cries fluttered into the curtains

 

Her eyes wanted nothing to get away

Her looks nailed down his hands his wrists his elbows

He gripped her hard so that life

Should not drag her from that moment

He wanted all future to cease

He wanted to topple with his arms round her

Off that moment’s brink and into nothing

Or everlasting or whatever there was

Her embrace was an immense press

To print him into her bones

His smiles were the garrets of a fairy palace

Where the real world would never come

Her smiles were spider bites

So he would lie still till she felt hungry

His words were occupying armies

Her laughs were an assassin’s attempts

His looks were bullets daggers of revenge

Her glances were ghosts in the corner with horrible secrets

His whispers were whips and jackboots

Her kisses were lawyers steadily writing

His caresses were the last hooks of a castaway

Her love-tricks were the grinding of locks

And their deep cries crawled over the floors

Like an animal dragging a great trap 

 

His promises were the surgeon’s gag

Her promises took the top off his skull

She would get a brooch made of it

His vows pulled out all her sinews

He showed her how to make a love-knot

Her vows put his eyes in formalin

At the back of her secret drawer

Their screams stuck in the wall

Their heads fell apart into sleep like the two halves

Of a lopped melon, but love is hard to stop

 

In their entwined sleep they exchanged arms and legs

In their dreams their brains took each other hostage

 

In the morning they wore each other’s face

 

Other books

Accidentally Perfect by Torrie Robles
Strength by Angela B. Macala-Guajardo
Dying for Dinner Rolls by Lois Lavrisa
A Dark Champion by Kinley MacGregor
Virgin Widow by Anne O'Brien
Staying at Daisy's by Jill Mansell