New and Selected Poems (9 page)

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Authors: Ted Hughes

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BOOK: New and Selected Poems
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Every shell that bursts

Blows it momentarily out, and he has to light it.

 

Every bullet that bangs off

Goes in at one of his ears and out at the other.

 

Every attack every rout

Storms through that face, like a flood through a footbridge.

 

Every new-dead ghost

Comes to that worn-out blood for its death-ration. 

 

Every remotest curse, weighted with a bloodclot,

Enters that ear like a blowfly.

 

Knives, forks, spoons divide his brains.

The supporting earth, and the night around him,

 

Smoulder like the slow, curing fire

Of a Javanese head-shrinker.

 

Nothing remains of the
tête
d’armée
but the skin –

A dangling parchment lantern

 

Slowly revolving to right, revolving to left,

 

Trembling a little with the incessant pounding,

 

Over the map, empty in the ring of light.

 
III WIT’S END
 

The General commits his emptiness to God.

 

And in place of his eyes

Crystal balls

Roll with visions. 

 

And his voice rises

From the dead fragments of men

 

A Frankenstein

A tank

A ghost

Roaming the impossible

Raising the hair on men’s heads.

 

His hand

Has swept the battlefield flat as a sheet of foolscap.

He writes:

 

I AM A LANTERN

                              IN THE HAND

                                                    OF A BLIND PEOPLE

 
IV TWO MINUTES’ SILENCE
 

The soldier’s boots, beautifully bulled,

Are graves

On the assembly line

Rolls Royces

Opera boxes

Double beds

Safes

With big smiles and laced-up eyes

 

His stockings

Are his own intestines

Cut into lengths –

They wear better and are

Nobody else’s loss,

So he needn’t charge diffidently

 

His battledress

Is Swanwhite’s undies

Punch and Judy curtains

The Queen’s pajamas

The Conjuror’s hankie

 

The flapping sheet

Of the shithouse phantom

 

His helmet

Is a Ministry pisspot

 

His rifle

Is a Thames turd

 

And away downwind he runs, over no man’s land,

In a shouting flight

From his own stink

 

Into the mushroom forest

 

Watched from the crowded walls.

 
V THE RED CARPET
 

So the leaves trembled.

 

He leaned for a moment

Into the head-on leaden blast of ghost

From death’s doorway

Then fell forward, under his equipment.

But though the jungle morass has gripped him to the knees

His outflung left hand clawed and got a hold

On Notting Hill

His brow banged hard down once then settled gently

Onto Hampstead Heath

The thumb of his twisted, smashed right hand

Settled in numb snugness

Across the great doorway of St Paul’s

His lips oozed soft words and blood bubbles

Into the Chalk Farm railway cutting

Westminster knuckled his riddled chest

His belt-buckle broke Clapham

His knees his knees were dissolving in the ebb of the Channel

And there he lay alive

His body full of lights, the restaurants seethed,

He groaned in the pushing of traffic that would not end

The girls strolled and their perfumes gargled in his throat

And in the holes in his chest

And though he could not lift his eyes to the streetlights

And though he could not stir either hand

He knew in that last stride, that last

Ten thousand league effort, and even off balance,

He had made it home. And he called –

 

Into mud.

 

Again the leaves trembled.

 

Splinters flew off Big Ben.

 
Theology
 
 

No, the serpent did not

Seduce Eve to the apple.

All that’s simply

Corruption of the facts.

 

Adam ate the apple.

Eve ate Adam.

The serpent ate Eve.

This is the dark intestine.

 

The serpent, meanwhile,

Sleeps his meal off in Paradise –

Smiling to hear

God’s querulous calling.

 
Gog
 
 

I woke to a shout: ‘I am Alpha and Omega.

Rocks and a few trees trembled

Deep in their own country.

I ran and an absence bounded beside me.

 

The dog’s god is a scrap dropped from the table.

The mouse’s saviour is a ripe wheat grain.

Hearing the Messiah cry

My mouth widens in adoration.

 

How fat are the lichens!

They cushion themselves on the silence.

The air wants for nothing.

The dust, too, is replete.

 

What was my error? My skull has sealed it out.

My great bones are massed in me.

They pound on the earth, my song excites them.

I do not look at the rocks and trees, I am frightened of what they see.

 

I listen to the song jarring my mouth

Where the skull-rooted teeth are in possession.

I am massive on earth. My feetbones beat on the earth

Over the sounds of motherly weeping …

 

Afterwards I drink at a pool quietly.

The horizon bears the rocks and trees away into twilight.

I lie down. I become darkness.

 

Darkness that all night sings and circles stamping.

 
Kreutzer Sonata
 
 

Now you have stabbed her good

A flower of unknown colour appallingly

Blackened by your surplus of bile

Blooms wetly on her dress.

 

‘Your mystery! Your mystery! …’

All facts, with all absence of facts,

Exhale as the wound there

Drinks its roots and breathes them to nothing.

 

Vile copulation! Vile! – etcetera.

But now your dagger has outdone everybody’s.

Say goodbye, for your wife’s sweet flesh goes off,

Booty of the envious spirit’s assault.

 

A sacrifice, not a murder.

One hundred and forty pounds

Of excellent devil, for God.

She tormented Ah demented you

 

With that fat lizard Trukachevsky,

That fiddling, leering penis.

Yet why should you castrate yourself

To be rid of them both?

 

Now you have stabbed her good

Trukachevsky is cut off

From any further operation on you.

And she can find nobody else.

 

Rest in peace, Tolstoy!

It must have taken supernatural greed

To need to corner all the meat in the world,

Even from your own hunger.

 
Out
 
 
I THE DREAM TIME
 

My father sat in his chair recovering

From the four-year mastication by gunfire and mud,

Body buffeted wordless, estranged by long soaking

In the colours of mutilation.

                                            His outer perforations

Were valiantly healed, but he and the hearth-fire, its blood-flicker

On biscuit-bowl and piano and table leg,

Moved into strong and stronger possession

Of minute after minute, as the clock’s tiny cog

Laboured and on the thread of his listening

Dragged him bodily from under

The mortised four-year strata of dead Englishmen

He belonged with. He felt his limbs clearing

With every slight, gingerish movement. While I, small and four,

Lay on the carpet as his luckless double,

His memory’s buried, immovable anchor,

Among jawbones and blown-off boots, tree-stumps, shellcases and craters,

Under rain that goes on drumming its rods and thickening

Its kingdom, which the sun has abandoned, and where nobody

Can ever again move from shelter.

 
II
‘The dead man in his cave beginning to sweat’,
 

The dead man in his cave beginning to sweat;

The melting bronze visor of flesh

Of the mother in the baby-furnace –

Nobody believes, it

Could be nothing, all

Undergo smiling at

The lulling of blood in

Their ears, their ears, their ears, their eyes

Are only drops of water and even the dead man suddenly

Sits up and sneezes – Atishoo!

Then the nurse wraps him up, smiling,

And, though faintly, the mother is smiling,

And it’s just another baby.

 

As after being blasted to bits

The reassembled infantryman

Tentatively totters out, gazing around with the eyes

Of an exhausted clerk.

 
III REMEMBRANCE DAY
 

The poppy is a wound, the poppy is the mouth

Of the grave, maybe of the womb searching –

 

A canvas-beauty puppet on a wire

Today whoring everywhere. It is years since I wore one.

 

It is more years

The shrapnel that shattered my father’s paybook

 

Gripped me, and all his dead

Gripped him to a time

 

He no more than they could outgrow, but, cast into one, like iron,

Hung deeper than refreshing of ploughs

 

In the woe-dark under my mother’s eye –

One anchor

 

Holding my juvenile neck bowed to the dunkings of the Atlantic.

 

So goodbye to that bloody-minded flower.

 

You dead bury your dead.

Goodbye to the cenotaphs on my mother’s breasts.

 

Goodbye to all the remaindered charms of my father’s survival.

 

Let England close. Let the green sea-anemone close.

 
New Moon in January
 
 

A splinter, flicked

Into the wide eyeball,

Severs its warning.

 

The head, severed while staring,

Felt nothing, only

Tilted slightly.

 

O lone

Eyelash on the darkening

Stripe of blood, O sail of death!

 

Frozen

In ether

Unearthly

 

Shelley’s faint-shriek

Trying to thaw while zero

Itself loses consciousness.

 
The Warriors of the North
 
 

Bringing their frozen swords, their salt-bleached eyes, their salt-bleached hair,

The snow’s stupefied anvils in rows,

Bringing their envy,

The slow ships feelered Southward, snails over the steep sheen of the water-globe.

 

Thawed at the red and black disgorging of abbeys,

The bountiful, cleft casks,

The fluttered bowels of the women of dead burghers,

And the elaborate, patient gold of the Gaels.

 

To no end

But this timely expenditure of themselves,

A cash-down, beforehand revenge, with extra,

For the gruelling relapse and prolongueur of their blood

 

Into the iron arteries of Calvin.

 
Song of a Rat 
 
 
I THE RAT’S DANCE
 

The rat is in the trap, it is in the trap,

And attacking heaven and earth with a mouthful of screeches like torn tin,

 

An effective gag.

When it stops screeching, it pants

 

And cannot think

‘This has no face, it must be God’ or

 

‘No answer is also an answer.’

Iron jaws, strong as the whole earth

 

Are stealing its backbone

For a crumpling of the Universe with screechings,

 

For supplanting every human brain inside its skull with a rat-body that knots and unknots,

A rat that goes on screeching,

 

Trying to uproot itself into each escaping screech,

But its long fangs bar that exit –

 

The incisors bared to the night spaces, threatening the constellations,

The glitterers in the black, to keep off,

 

Keep their distance,

While it works this out. 

 

The rat understands suddenly. It bows and is still,

With a little beseeching of blood on its nose-end.

 

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