Read New and Selected Poems Online

Authors: Ted Hughes

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New and Selected Poems (5 page)

BOOK: New and Selected Poems
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To Paint a Water Lily
 
 

A green level of lily leaves

Roofs the pond’s chamber and paves

 

The flies’ furious arena: study

These, the two minds of this lady.

 

First observe the air’s dragonfly

That eats meat, that bullets by

 

Or stands in space to take aim;

Others as dangerous comb the hum

 

Under the trees. There are battle-shouts

And death-cries everywhere hereabouts

 

But inaudible, so the eyes praise

To see the colours of these flies

 

Rainbow their arcs, spark, or settle

Cooling like beads of molten metal

 

Through the spectrum. Think what worse

Is the pond-bed’s matter of course;

 

Prehistorie bedragonned times

Crawl that darkness with Latin names,

 

Have evolved no improvements there,

Jaws for heads, the set stare,

 

Ignorant of age as of hour –

Now paint the long-necked lily-flower

 

Which, deep in both worlds, can be still

As a painting, trembling hardly at all

 

Though the dragonfly alight,

Whatever horror nudge her root.

 
The Bull Moses
 
 

A hoist up and I could lean over

The upper edge of the high half-door,

My left foot ledged on the hinge, and look in at the byre’s

Blaze of darkness: a sudden shut-eyed look

Backward into the head.

                                       Blackness is depth

Beyond star. But the warm weight of his breathing,

The ammoniac reek of his litter, the hotly-tongued

Mash of his cud, steamed against me.

Then, slowly, as onto the mind’s eye –

The brow like masonry, the deep-keeled neck:

Something come up there onto the brink of the gulf,

Hadn’t heard of the world, too deep in itself to be called to,

Stood in sleep. He would swing his muzzle at a fly

But the square of sky where I hung, shouting, waving,

Was nothing to him; nothing of our light

Found any reflection in him.

                                            Each dusk the farmer led him

Down to the pond to drink and smell the air,

And he took no pace but the farmer

Led him to take it, as if he knew nothing

Of the ages and continents of his fathers,

Shut, while he wombed, to a dark shed

And steps between his door and the duckpond;

The weight of the sun and the moon and the world hammered

To a ring of brass through his nostrils. He would raise

His streaming muzzle and look out over the meadows,

But the grasses whispered nothing awake, the fetch

Of the distance drew nothing to momentum

In the locked black of his powers. He came strolling gently back,

Paused neither toward the pig-pens on his right,

Nor toward the cow-byres on his left: something

Deliberate in his leisure, some beheld future

Founding in his quiet.

                                    I kept the door wide,

Closed it after him and pushed the bolt.

 
Cat and Mouse
 
 

On the sheep-cropped summit, under hot sun,

The mouse crouched, staring out the chance

It dared not take,

                            Time and a world

Too old to alter, the five mile prospect –

Woods, villages, farms – hummed its heat-heavy

Stupor of life.

                         Whether to two

Feet or four, how are prayers contracted!

Whether in God’s eye or the eye of a cat.

 
View of a Pig
 
 

The pig lay on a barrow dead.

It weighed, they said, as much as three men.

Its eyes closed, pink white eyelashes.

Its trotters stuck straight out.

 

Such weight and thick pink bulk

Set in death seemed not just dead.

It was less than lifeless, further off.

It was like a sack of wheat.

 

I thumped it without feeling remorse.

One feels guilty insulting the dead,

Walking on graves. But this pig

Did not seem able to accuse.

 

It was too dead. Just so much

A poundage of lard and pork.

Its last dignity had entirely gone.

It was not a figure of fun.

 

Too dead now to pity.

To remember its life, din, stronghold

Of earthly pleasure as it had been,

Seemed a false effort, and off the point.

 

Too deadly factual. Its weight

Oppressed me – how could it be moved?

And the trouble of cutting it up!

The gash in its throat was shocking, but not pathetic.

 

Once I ran at a fair in the noise

To catch a greased piglet

That was faster and nimbler than a cat,

Its squeal was the rending of metal.

 

Pigs must have hot blood, they feel like ovens.

Their bite is worse than a horse’s –

They chop a half-moon clean out.

They eat cinders, dead cats.

 

Distinctions and admirations such

As this one was long finished with.

I stared at it a long time. They were going to scald it,

Scald it and scour it like a doorstep.

 
The Retired Colonel
 
 

Who lived at the top end of our street

Was a Mafeking stereotype, ageing.

Came, face pulped scarlet with kept rage,

For air past our gate.

Barked at his dog knout and whipcrack

And cowerings of India: five or six wars

Stiffened in his reddened neck;

Brow bull-down for the stroke.

 

Wife dead, daughters gone, lived on

Honouring his own caricature.

Shot through the heart with whisky wore

The lurch like ancient courage, would not go down

While posterity’s trash stood, held

His habits like a last stand, even

As if he had Victoria rolled

In a Union Jack in that stronghold.

 

And what if his sort should vanish?

The rabble starlings roar upon

Trafalgar. The man-eating British lion

By a pimply age brought down.

Here’s his head mounted, though only in rhymes.

Beside the head of the last English

Wolf (those starved gloomy times!)

And the last sturgeon of Thames.

 
November
 
 

The month of the drowned dog. After long rain the land

Was sodden as the bed of an ancient lake,

Treed with iron and birdless. In the sunk lane

The ditch – a seep silent all summer –

 

Made brown foam with a big voice: that, and my boots

On the lane’s scrubbed stones, in the gulleyed leaves,

Against the hill’s hanging silence;

Mist silvering the droplets on the bare thorns

 

Slower than the change of daylight.

In a let of the ditch a tramp was bundled asleep;

Face tucked down into beard, drawn in

Under his hair like a hedgehog’s. I took him for dead,

 

But his stillness separated from the death

Of the rotting grass and the ground. A wind chilled,

And a fresh comfort tightened through him,

Each hand stuffed deeper into the other sleeve.

 

His ankles, bound with sacking and hairy band,

Rubbed each other, resettling. The wind hardened;

A puff shook a glittering from the thorns,

And again the rains’ dragging grey columns

 

Smudged the farms. In a moment

The fields were jumping and smoking; the thorns

Quivered, riddled with the glassy verticals.

I stayed on under the welding cold

 

Watching the tramp’s face glisten and the drops on his coat

Flash and darken. I thought what strong trust

Slept in him – as the trickling furrows slept,

And the thorn-roots in their grip on darkness;

 

And the buried stones, taking the weight of winter;

The hill where the hare crouched with clenched teeth.

Rain plastered the land till it was shining

Like hammered lead, and I ran, and in the rushing wood

 

Shuttered by a black oak leaned.

The keeper’s gibbet had owls and hawks

By the neck, weasels, a gang of cats, crows:

Some, stiff, weightless, twirled like dry bark bits

 

In the drilling rain. Some still had their shape,

Had their pride with it; hung, chins on chests,

Patient to outwait these worst days that beat

Their crowns bare and dripped from their feet.

 
An Otter 
 
 
I
 

       Underwater eyes, an eel’s

Oil of water body, neither fish nor beast is the otter:

   Four-legged yet water-gifted, to outfish fish;

       With webbed feet and long ruddering tail

       And a round head like an old tomcat.

 

       Brings the legend of himself

From before wars or burials, in spite of hounds and

                                                         vermin-poles;

   Does not take root like the badger. Wanders, cries;

       Gallops along land he no longer belongs to;

       Re-enters the water by melting.

 

       Of neither water nor land. Seeking

Some world lost when first he dived, that he cannot

                                                        come at since,

   Takes his changed body into the holes of lakes;

       As if blind, cleaves the stream’s push till he licks

       The pebbles of the source; from sea

 

       To sea crosses in three nights

Like a king in hiding. Crying to the old shape of the

                                                           starlit land,

   Over sunken farms where the bats go round,

       Without answer. Till light and birdsong come

       Walloping up roads with the milk wagon.

 
II
 

The hunt’s lost him. Pads on mud,

Among sedges, nostrils a surface bead,

The otter remains, hours. The air,

Circling the globe, tainted and necessary,

 

Mingling tobacco-smoke, hounds and parsley,

Comes carefully to the sunk lungs.

So the self under the eye lies,

Attendant and withdrawn. The otter belongs

 

In double robbery and concealment –

From water that nourishes and drowns, and from land

That gave him his length and the mouth of the hound.

He keeps fat in the limpid integument

 

Reflections live on. The heart beats thick,

Big trout muscle out of the dead cold;

Blood is the belly of logic; he will lick

The fishbone bare. And can take stolen hold

 

On a bitch otter in a field full

Of nervous horses, but linger nowhere.

Yanked above hounds, reverts to nothing at all,

To this long pelt over the back of a chair.

 
Witches
 
 

Once was every woman the witch

To ride a weed the ragwort road:

Devil to do whatever she would:

Each rosebud, every old bitch.

 

Did they bargain their bodies or no?

Proprietary the devil that

Went horsing on their every thought

When they scowled the strong and lucky low.

 

Dancing in Ireland nightly, gone

To Norway (the ploughboy bridled),

Nightlong under the blackamoor spraddled,

Back beside their spouse by dawn

 

As if they had dreamed all. Did they dream it?

Oh, our science says they did.

It was all wishfully dreamed in bed.

Small psychology would unseam it.

 

Bitches still sulk, rosebuds blow,

And we are devilled. And though these weep

Over our harms, who’s to know

Where their feet dance while their heads sleep?

 
BOOK: New and Selected Poems
8.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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