New and Selected Poems (28 page)

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Authors: Ted Hughes

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BOOK: New and Selected Poems
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WOLFWATCHING
 
 
Astrological Conundrums
 
 
I THE FOOL’S EVIL DREAM
 

I was just walking about.

Trees here, trees there, ferny accompaniment.

Rocks sticking through their moss jerseys.

A twilight like smoked spectacles, depressive.

 

I saw a glowing beast – a tigress.

Only different with flower-smells, wet-root smells,

Fish-still-alive-from-their-weed-river smells

And eyes that hurt me with beauty.

 

She wanted to play so we gambolled.

She promised to show me her cave

Which was the escape route from death

And which came out into a timeless land.

 

To find this cave, she said, we lie down

And you hold me, so, and we fly.

So it was I came to be folded

In the fur of a tiger. And as we travelled

 

She told me of a very holy man

Who fed himself to a tigress

Because hunger had dried up her milk

And as he filled her belly he became

 

The never-dying god who gives everything

Which he had always wanted to be.

As I heard her story I dissolved

In the internal powers of tiger

 

And passed through a dim land

Swinging under her backbone. Till I heard

A sudden cry of fear, an infant’s cry –

Close, as if my own ear had cried it.

 

I sat up

Wet and alone

Among starry rocks.

 

A bright spirit went away weeping.

 
II NEARLY AWAKE
 

The bulls swing their headweights,

Eyes bulging storms and moon-terrors.

Their cleft roots creak all round you

Where you lie, face-bedded, vegetable.

 

A frozen stone – the stone of your headbone.

The Universe flies dark.

The bulls bulk darker, as their starred nostrils

Blow and ponder your spine.

 

You lie, helpless as grass. Your prayer,

Petrified into the earth’s globe,

Supports you, a crest of fear

On its unstirring.

 

The wild bulls of your mother have found you.

Huge nudgings of blood, sperm, saliva

Rasp you alive, towel you awake with tongues.

Now they start gnawing the small of your back.

 

The cry you dare not cry in these moments

Will last you a lifetime.

 
III TELL
 

This was my dream. Suddenly my old steel bow

Sprang into my hand and my whole body

Leaned into the bend a harp frame

So perfectly strung it seemed weightless.

 

I saw the Raven sitting alone

On the crest of the globe. I could see

The Raven’s eye agleam in the sky river

Like an emblem on a flowing banner.

 

I saw the Raven’s eye watching me

Through the slitted fabric of the skyflow.

I bent the bow’s full weight against the star

In that eye until I could see nothing

 

But that star. Then as I sank my aim

Deeper into the star that had grown

To fill the Universe I heard a whisper:

‘Be careful. I’m here. Don’t forget me.’

 

With all my might – I hesitated.

 
Dust As We Are
 
 

My post-war father was so silent

He seemed to be listening. I eavesdropped

On the hot line. His lonely sittings

Mangled me, in secret – like TV

Watched too long, my nerves lasered.

Then, an after image of the incessant

Mowing passage of machine-gun effects,

What it filled a trench with. And his laugh

(How had that survived – so nearly intact?)

Twitched the curtain never quite deftly enough

Over the hospital wards

Crowded with his (photographed) shock-eyed pals.

 

I had to use up a lot of spirit

Getting over it. I was helping him.

I was his supplementary convalescent.

He took up his pre-war
joie
de
vivre.

But his displays of muscular definition

Were a bleached montage – lit landscapes:

Swampquakes of the slime of puddled soldiers

Where bones and bits of equipment

Showered from every shell-burst.

                                                    Naked men

Slithered staring where their mothers and sisters

Would never have to meet their eyes, or see

Exactly how they sprawled and were trodden.

 

So he had been salvaged and washed.

His muscles very white – marble white.

He had been heavily killed. But we had revived him.

Now he taught us a silence like prayer.

There he sat, killed but alive – so long

As we were very careful. I divined,

With a comb,

Under his wavy, golden hair, as I combed it,

The fragility of skull. And I filled

With his knowledge.

                                  After mother’s milk

This was the soul’s food. A soap-smell spectre

Of the massacre of innocents. So the soul grew.

A strange thing, with rickets – a hyena.

No singing – that kind of laughter.

 
Telegraph Wires
 
 

Take telegraph wires, a lonely moor,

And fit them together. The thing comes alive in your ear.

 

Towns whisper to towns over the heather.

But the wires cannot hide from the weather.

 

So oddly, so daintily made

It is picked up and played.

 

Such unearthly airs

The ear hears, and withers!

 

In the revolving ballroom of space,

Bowed over the moor, a bright face

 

Draws out of telegraph wires the tones

That empty human bones.

 
Sacrifice
 
 

Born at the bottom of the heap. And as he grew upwards

The welts of his brow deepened, fold upon fold.

Like the Tragic Mask.

Cary Grant was his living double.

 

They said: When he was little he’d drop

And kick and writhe, and kick and cry:

‘I’ll break my leg! I’ll break my leg!’

Till he’d ground his occiput bald.

 

While the brothers built cords, moleskins, khakis

Into dynastic, sweated ziggurats,

His fateful forehead sank

Away among Westerns, the ruts of the Oregon Trail.

 

Screwdriver, drill, chisel, saw, hammer

Were less than no use.

A glass-fronted cabinet was his showpiece.

His wife had locked him in there with the china.

 

His laugh jars at my ear. That laugh

Was an elastic vault into freedom.

Sound as a golfball.

He’d belt it into the blue.

 

He never drank in a bar. When he stood

Before he’d stepped she’d plumped the cushions beneath him.

So perfectly kept.

Sundays they drove here and there in the car.

 

An armchair Samson. Baffled and shorn

His dream bulged into forearms

That performed their puppet-play of muscles

To make a nephew stare. He and I

 

Lammed our holly billets across Banksfields –

A five-inch propeller climbing the skylines

For two, three seconds – to the drop. And the paced-out length

Of his leash! The limit of human strength!

 

Suddenly he up and challenged

His brothers for a third of the partnership.

The duumvirate of wives turned down their thumbs.

Brotherly concern – Rain from Rochdale!

 

Snow from Halifax! Stars over valley walls!

His fireside escape

Simple as leaping astride a bare-back pinto

Was a kick at the ceiling, and that laugh.

 

He toiled in his attic after midnight

Mass-producing toy ducks

On wooden wheels, that went with clicks.

Flight! Flight!

 

The brothers closed their eyes. They quivered their jowls:

British Columbia’s the place for a chap like thee!

The lands of the future! Look at Australia –

Crying out for timber buildings! Get
out there!

 

On the canal bridge bend, at Hawkscluffe,

A barrel bounced off a lorry.

His motorbike hit the wall.

‘I just flew straight up – and when I dropped

 

I missed the canal! I actually missed the canal!

I nearly broke the bank! For once

I landed smack on my feet!

My shoelaces burst from top to bottom!

 

His laugh thumped my body.

When he tripped

The chair from beneath him, in his attic,

Midsummer dusk, his sister, forty miles off,

 

Cried out at the hammer blow on her nape.

And his daughter

Who’d climbed up to singsong: ‘Supper, Daddy’

Fell back down the stairs to the bottom.

 
For the Duration
 
 

I felt a strange fear when the war-talk,

Like a creeping barrage, approached you.

Jig and jag I’d fitted much of it together.

Our treasure, your D.C.M. – again and again

Carrying in the wounded

Collapsing with exhaustion. And as you collapsed

A shell-burst

Just in front of you lifting you upright

For the last somnambulist yards

Before you fell under your load into the trench.

The shell, some other time, that buried itself

Between your feet as you walked

And thoughtfully failed to go off.

The shrapnel hole, over your heart – how it spun you.

The blue scar of the bullet at your ankle

From a traversing machine-gun that tripped you

As you cleared the parapet. Meanwhile

The horrors were doled out, everybody

Had his appalling tale.

But what alarmed me most

Was your silence. Your refusal to tell.

I had to hear from others

What you survived and what you did.

 

Maybe you didn’t want to frighten me.

Now it’s too late.

Now I’d ask you shamelessly.

But then I felt ashamed.

What was my shame? Why couldn’t I have borne

To hear you telling what you underwent?

Why was your war so much more unbearable

Than anybody else’s? As if nobody else

Knew how to remember. After some uncle’s

Virtuoso tale of survival

That made me marvel and laugh –

I looked at your face, your cigarette

Like a dial-finger. And my mind

Stopped with numbness.

 

Your day-silence was the coma

Out of which your night-dreams rose shouting.

I could hear you from my bedroom –

The whole hopelessness still going on,

No man’s land still crying and burning

Inside our house, and you climbing again

Out of the trench, and wading back into the glare

 

As if you might still not manage to reach us

And carry us to safety.

 
Walt
 
 
I UNDER HIGH WOOD
 

Going up for the assault that morning

They passed the enclosure of prisoners.

‘A big German stood at the wire‚’ he said,

‘A big German, and he caught my eye.

And he cursed me. I felt his eye curse me.’

 

Halfway up the field, the bullet

Hit him in the groin. He rolled

Into a shell-hole. The sun rose and burned.

A sniper clipped his forehead. He wormed

Deeper down. Bullet after bullet

Dug at the crater rim, searching for him.

Another clipped him. Then the sniper stopped.

 

All that day he lay. He went walks

Along the Heights Road, from Peckett to Midgley,

Down to Mytholmroyd (past Ewood

Of his ancestors, past the high-perched factory

Of his future life). Up the canal bank,

Up Redacre, along and down into Hebden,

Then up into Crimsworth Dene, to their old campground

In the happy valley.

And up over Shackleton Hill, to Widdop,

Back past Greenwood Lea, above Hardcastles,

To Heptonstall – all day

He walked about the valley, as he lay

Under High Wood in the shell-hole.

 

I knew the knot of scar on his temple.

 

We stood in the young March corn

Of a perfect field. His fortune made.

His life’s hope over. Me beside him

Just the age he’d been when that German

Took aim with his eye and hit him so hard

It brought him and his wife down together,

With all his children one after the other.

 

A misty rain prickled and hazed.

‘Here‚’ he hazarded. ‘Somewhere just about here.

This is where he stopped me. I got this far.’

 

He frowned uphill towards the skyline tree-fringe

As through binoculars

Towards all that was left.

 

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