Read New and Selected Poems Online

Authors: Ted Hughes

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New and Selected Poems (25 page)

BOOK: New and Selected Poems
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In the Likeness of a Grasshopper
 
 

A trap

Waits on the field path.

 

A wicker contraption, with working parts,

Its spring tensed and set.

 

So flimsily made, out of grass

(Out of the stems, the joints, the raspy-dry flags).

 

Baited with a fur-soft caterpillar,

A belly of amorous life, pulsing signals.

 

Along comes a love-sick, perfume-footed

Music of the wild earth.

 

The trap, touched by a breath,

Jars into action, its parts blur –

 

And music cries out.

 

A sinewy violin

Has caught its violinist.

 

Cloud-fingered summer, the beautiful trapper,

Picks up the singing cage

 

And takes out the Song, adds it to the Songs

With which she robes herself, which are her wealth,

 

Sets her trap again, a yard further on.

 
from
WHAT IS THE TRUTH?
 
 
New Foal
 
 

Yesterday he was nowhere to be found

In the skies or under the skies.

 

Suddenly he’s here – a warm heap

Of ashes and embers, fondled by small draughts.

 

A star dived from outer space – flared

And burned out in the straw.

Now something is stirring in the smoulder.

We call it a foal.

 

Still stunned

He has no idea where he is.

His eyes, dew-dusky, explore gloom walls and a glare doorspace.

Is this the world?

It puzzles him. It is a great numbness.

 

He pulls himself together, getting used to the weight of things

And to that tall horse nudging him, and to this straw.

 

He rests

From the first blank shock of light, the empty daze

Of the questions –

What has happened? What am I?

 

His ears keep on asking, gingerly.

 

But his legs are impatient,

Recovering from so long being nothing

They are restless with ideas, they start to try a few out,

Angling this way and that,

Feeling for leverage, learning fast –

 

And suddenly he’s up

 

And stretching – a giant hand

Strokes him from nose to heel

Perfecting his outline, as he tightens

The knot of himself.

                                  Now he comes teetering

Over the weird earth. His nose

Downy and magnetic, draws him, incredulous,

Towards his mother. And the world is warm

And careful and gentle. Touch by touch

Everything fits him together.

 

Soon he’ll be almost a horse.

He wants only to be Horse,

Pretending each day more and more Horse

Till he’s perfect Horse. Then unearthly Horse

Will surge through him, weightless, a spinning of flame

Under sudden gusts,

 

It will coil his eyeball and his heel

In a single terror – like the awe

Between lightning and thunderclap.

 

And curve his neck, like a sea-monster emerging

Among foam,

 

And fling the new moons through his stormy banner,

And the full moons and the dark moons.

 
The Hen
 
 

The Hen

Worships the dust. She finds God everywhere.

Everywhere she finds his jewels.

And she does not care

What the cabbage thinks.

 

She has forgotten flight

Because she has interpreted happily

Her recurrent dream

Of clashing cleavers, of hot ovens,

And of the little pen-knife blade

Splitting her palate.

She flaps her wings, like shallow egg-baskets,

To show her contempt

For those who live on escape

And a future of empty sky.

 

She rakes, with noble, tireless foot,

The treasury of the dirt,

And clucks with the mechanical alarm clock

She chose instead of song

When the Creator

Separated the Workers and the Singers.

 

With her eye on reward

She tilts her head religiously

At the most practical angle

Which reveals to her

That the fox is a country superstition,

That her eggs have made man her slave

And that the heavens, for all their threatening,

Have not yet fallen.

 

And she is stern. Her eye is fierce – blood

(That weakness) is punished instantly.

She is a hard bronze of uprightness.

And indulges herself in nothing

Except to swoon a little, a delicious slight swoon,

One eye closed, just before sleep,

Conjuring the odour of tarragon.

 
The Hare
 
 
I
 

That Elf

Riding his awkward pair of haunchy legs

 

That weird long-eared Elf

Wobbling down the highway

 

Don’t overtake him, don’t try to drive past him,

He’s scatty, he’s all over the road,

He can’t keep his steering, in his ramshackle go-cart,

His big loose wheels, buckled and rusty,

Nearly wobbling off

 

And all the screws in his head wobbling and loose

 

And his eyes wobbling

 
II
 

The Hare is a very fragile thing.

The life in the hare is a glassy goblet, and her yellow-fringed frost-flake belly says: Fragile.

 

The hare’s bones are light glass. And the hare’s face –

 

Who lifted her face to the Lord?

Her new-budded nostrils and lips,

For the daintiest pencillings, the last eyelash touches

 

Delicate as the down of a moth,

And the breath of awe

Which fixed the mad beauty-light

In her look

As if her retina

Were a moon perpetually at full.

 

Who is it, at midnight on the A30,

The Druid soul,

 

The night-streaker, the sudden lumpy goblin

That thumps your car under the belly

Then cries with human pain

And becomes a human baby on the road

That you dare hardly pick up?

 

Or leaps, like a long bat with little headlights,

Straight out of darkness

Into the driver’s nerves

With a jangle of cries

As if the car had crashed into a flying harp

 

So that the driver’s nerves flail and cry

Like a burst harp.

 
III
 

Uneasy she nears

As if she were being lured, but fearful,

Nearer.

Like a large egg toppling itself – mysterious!

 

Then she’ll stretch, tall, on her hind feet,

And lean on the air,

Taut – like a stilled yacht waiting on the air –

 

And what does the hunter see? A fairy woman?

A dream beast?

A kangaroo of the March corn?

 

The loveliest face listening,

Her black-tipped ears hearing the bud of the blackthorn

Opening its lips,

Her black-tipped hairs hearing tomorrow’s weather

Combing the mare’s tails,

Her snow-fluff belly feeling for the first breath,

Her orange nape, foxy with its dreams of the fox –

 

Witch-maiden

Heavy with trembling blood – astounding

How much blood there is in her body!

She is a moony pond of quaking blood

 

Twitched with spells, her gold-ringed eye spellbound –

 

Carrying herself so gently, balancing

Herself with the gentlest touches

As if her eyes brimmed –

 
IV
 

I’ve seen her,

A lank, lean hare, with her long thin feet

And her long, hollow thighs,

And her ears like ribbons

Careering by moonlight

In her Flamenco, her heels flinging the dust

On the drum of the hill.

 

And I’ve seen him, hobbling stiffly

God of Leapers

Surprised by dawn, earth-bound, and stained

With drying mud,

Painfully rocking over the furrows

 

With his Leaping-Legs, his Power-Thighs

Much too powerful for ordinary walking,

So powerful

They seem almost a burden, almost a problem,

Nearly an aching difficulty for him

When he tries to loiter or pause,

Nearly a heaving pain to lift and move

Like turning a cold car-engine with a bent crank handle –

 

Till a shock, a terror, with a bang

Grabs at her ears. An oven door

Bangs open, both barrels, and a barking

Bursts out of onions –

                                   and she leaps

 

And her heels

Hard as angle-iron kick salt and pepper

Into the lurcher’s eyes –

                                       and kick and kick

The spinning, turnip world

Into the lurcher’s gullet –

                                        as she slips

Between thin hawthorn and thinner bramble

Into tomorrow.

 
from
RIVER
 
 
The River
 
 

Fallen from heaven, lies across

The lap of his mother, broken by world.

 

But water will go on

Issuing from heaven

 

In dumbness uttering spirit brightness

Through its broken mouth.

 

Scattered in a million pieces and buried

Its dry tombs will split, at a sign in the sky,

 

At a rending of veils.

It will rise, in a time after times,

 

After swallowing death and the pit

It will return stainless

 

For the delivery of this world.

So the river is a god

 

Knee-deep among reeds, watching men,

Or hung by the heels down the door of a dam

 

It is a god, and inviolable.

Immortal. And will wash itself of all deaths.

 
Milesian Encounter on the Sligachan
 

for
Hilary
and
Simon

 

‘Up in the pools,’ they’d said, and ‘Two miles upstream.’

 

Something sinister about bogland rivers.

 

And a shock –

 

     after the two miles of tumblequag, of Ice-Age hairiness, crusty, quaking cadaver and me lurching over it in elation like a daddy-long-legs –

 

     after crooked little clatterbrook and again clatterbrook (a hurry of shallow grey light so distilled it looked like acid) –

 

     and after the wobbly levels of a razor-edged, blood-smeared grass, the flood-sucked swabs of bog-cotton, the dusty calico rip-up of snipe –

 

     under those petrified scapulae, vertebrae, horn-skulls the Cuillins (asylum of eagles) that were blue-silvered like wrinkled baking foil in the blue noon that day, and tremulous –

 

     early August, in a hot lateness (only three hours before my boat), a glimpse of my watch and suddenly

 

     up to my hip in a suck-hole then on again teetering over the broken-necked heath-bobs a good half-hour and me melting in my combined fuel of toil and clobber suddenly

 

The shock.

The sheer cavern of current piling silence

Under my feet.

 

So lonely-drowning deep, so drowned-hair silent

So clear

Cleansing the body cavity of the underbog.

 

Such a brilliant cut-glass interior

Sliding under me

 

And I felt a little bit giddy

Ghostly

As I fished the long pool-tail

Peering into that superabundance of spirit.

 

And now where were they, my fellow aliens from prehistory?

Those peculiar eyes

So like mine, but fixed at zero,

Pressing in from outer darkness

Eyes of aimed sperm and of egg on their errand,

Looking for immortality

In the lap of a broken volcano, in the furrow of a lost glacier,

Those shuttles of love-shadow?

 

Only humbler beings waved at me –

Weeds grazing the bottom, idling their tails.

 

Till the last pool –

A broad, coiling whorl, a deep ear

Of pondering amber,

Greenish and precious like a preservative,

With a ram’s skull sunk there – magnified, a Medusa,

Funereal, phosphorescent, a lamp

Ten feet under the whisky.

 

I heard this pool whisper a warning.

 

I tickled its leading edges with temptation.

I stroked its throat with a whisker.

I licked the moulded hollows

Of its collarbones

Where the depth, now underbank opposite,

Pulsed up from contained excitements –

 

Eerie how you know when it’s coming –

So I felt it now, my blood

Prickling and thickening, altering

With an ushering-in of chills, a weird onset

As if mountains were pushing mountains higher

Behind me, to crowd over my shoulder –

 

Then the pool lifted a travelling bulge

And grabbed the tip of my heart-nerve, and crashed,

 

Trying to wrench it from me, and again

Lifted a flash of arm for leverage

And it was a Gruagach of the Sligachan!

Some Boggart up from a crack in the granite!

A Glaistig out of the skull!

                                          – what was it gave me

Such a supernatural, beautiful fright

 

And let go, and sank disembodied

Into the eye-pupil darkness?

 

Only a little salmon.

                               
Salmo
salar

The loveliest, left-behind, most-longed-for ogress

Of the Palaeolithic

Watched me through her time-warped judas-hole

In the ruinous castle of Skye

 

As I faded from the light of reality.

 
BOOK: New and Selected Poems
5.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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