Not by these
Not by these seeking to entrap
you, Dear Paula, Philippa, Jocelyn, Only to show your souls'
beginning: Calm, storm and sweet witch; Whom I have severally
encountered - (Ball-gown sinking into the pavement, (Suddenly feeling
evil round you, (Wandering over empty moorland) - Dear Paula, Philippa,
Joceleyn (Whom I must always love or hate) Cling to each separate
fate.
24 June
1968
Reflection
Looking into your eyes, my dear, I see there
Caught in a storm, a ship decked out in gold -
Waves are battering, wind and rain are tearing, Sails are a patchwork, timbers worn and holed - -
I thought it a ship of death, but see, quite firmly Lashed to the mast, a man who is weak and blind,
Who sails over a sea of desolation Seeking the tidless harbours of the mind.
August 1968
Anna
Not a flame or a spark or a gleam or even a dream Possessed us
Of the fire which in summertime carelessly Caressed us... Only a pallid memory Depressed us.
5 November
1968
Warning to Myself
O drunken poet of slow-burning fire
If you forget that goddesses inspire
And change the proper weapon of your mind From love, the golden shaft of all true times
To mockery of verses barbed with rhymes The punishment is fixed - never to find
And finally to forget your heart's desire.
2 November 1969
Accessory After the Fact
His staff wept; Nixon gamely smiled and went
But even after his lies and his double-dealing
Soldiers presented arms to their President.
This curious contrast robbed me of the feeling
Justice was done; power is more than just,
Writes its own future and decides the rules.
Nixon thought: 'Rather than betray the trust
'America placed in me, because fools
'Betrayed my trust in them at Watergate,
'I will protect them, and protect my name;
'The President is power; I'll write in scenes
'To prove the end can justify the means.'
So, what destroyed him? It was no blind fate:
Capricious power to the people came;
They changed the rules and Nixon lost the game.
11/12 August
1974
The Good Man
When doomed to heaven, the
good man churlishly Replies he wants no part of it: when pressed, He
tells St. Peter of his low regard For endless singing; while a crystal
sea Frankly appals him, who spent half his life Watching the waves rage
on a shingle shore.
St. Peter whispers quietly in his
ear: "Go down below - God moved there long ago. "Above? No, not the
Devil, but St. Paul: "It was a myth that the scales fell from his
eyes."
c.1983-1980
St. Valentine's Eve
Full moon tonight: Before the
next full moon Blots out the stars With self-important glare - By
starlight, Come into my arms by starlight And find love waiting
there.
13 February
1987
Dialogue
She: Having recently won
freedom, And then longed for you to be near, First comes attraction,
then fear: There was a kiss that seemed to taste of love - Sweetheart,
have I found you too dear?
Having recently rediscovered
hope, Climbing from dreary shadow-lands of night, To bring new colour
singing into sight, You seemed my friend upon this great endeavour, How
to distinguish what is false, what real. Now doubts begin, grave doubts:
you came, you said To help me forward into greater light: You came to
help; but will you stay to steal?
He: I am indeed your friend;
have faith, and trust That kiss did taste of love and not of lust; And
yet my love is unconditional: Go freely in the world, do what you must,
Knowing this much at least is true and real: I came to help, to stay, but
not to steal.
26 June
1990
Fortunate
Fortunate to be walking Over
this timeless land, We wander onward talking Apart or hand-in-hand
Trying to understand -
Searching out rhyme and reason
For whom we have become, Through season after season Of foxglove, briar
and plum, Careless if paths seem endless, Careless when days seem
long: Knowing that, never friendless We'll find where we belong And
end our search in song.
July 1990
Something Went Wrong
Something went wrong last time
- What was it? Something to do with the nature of our work? So much
to resolve, so much intense pain Beat down like giant bells from the
remembered past, Crying out danger! Danger! Until bells became skulls,
heaped up by every bedside: Then came the shadow of death; in creaking
metal Warning of some disaster. 'Courage!' I cried; 'Nowhere now but
forward!' Bravely you responded; but then came death itself, Tearing a
huge rent in time, like a black hole Pulling you fiercely towards
extinction.
Suddenly the scene changed To
a sandy beach, Gulls crying, the sea lapping gently along the shore,
Palm trees, and a familiar voice in your ears. That was another
illusion: Not far behind loomed those dreary realms From which you
emerged only lately: So where is hope?
It is here, in friendship. Let
us begin again: Exploring and understanding the past together, Finding,
in time, new independence, new purpose, Healing old wounds with a new
creation.
14 August
1990
Gone Far Away
Dear lover, now gone far away
Into a realm I cannot own Sitting on your familiar throne Leaving me
here bereft, alone: I thank you for the hours we spent< I do not ask
you to relent. Your anger comes because you feel That what I felt for
you was real. Pretend to feel indifference? It is no more than a
pretence. Yet we may work together still, Though neither bent to
either's will; And may I hope in friendship find Some consolation in
that blind And unpremeditated trust Which lasts much longer than mere
lust.
14 November
1990
Fragment on a Broken Clay
Tablet
Euphrates, Lord, beneath this
orange sky Ruled by the Sun-god, willing us to die (His messengers the
carrion birds of prey (That swoop from heaven on an evil day) Deliver
us from drought, for ever flow That we may irrigate our lands and go
With hopeful hands to plant our store of seed Knowing you will provide the
crops we need. Our children prosper and our cities stand Monuments to
your grace throughout the land, Cities to last a thousand years, built
well And through their streets fine vehicles roll by, Some with wild
asses pawing to be free, Others with oxen...
c.1996
Some lines for the lovely Sara to accompany a bunch of flowers
Having (however briefly) introduced
A serpent into Paradise, traduced
[A vile rhyme, I know, but let it pass
Mere symptom of a mind put out to grass]
Of hospitality the very name
Of liberality the wholesome frame
Of kindly company designed to please -
Your foolish host is quaking at the knees
And begs forgiveness with these flowers - please
Accept them and forgive, life being too brief
To spend in sorrow for an hour of grief;
Accept them and forget - let ninety-seven
Fade into darkness like the winter heaven.
22 December 1997
Mourning at Aberystwyth
He watched the waves
Abandoning their claim on a long promontory of rock The pier left stranded
high and dry...
13 February
1998
Foolish Romantic
1) His dream
My dearest, passionate and
wise With gentle hands and tender eyes Loving companion on a voyage
Unplanned but suddenly begun... No charts or compasses, but look how the
sun Catches the billowing sails - I could agree My dear, my love, to
take things as they come Protect your independence, sound no drum Or
trumpet as we both set out to sea.
She looks at him doubtfully, yet he
continues
Yes, I'll agree; yet leave a
little space For unexpected joy, for heaven's grace: Yes, I agree;
though neither of us knows On what wild shores our craft may one day
beach, Whether our barques decked out with golden hope Will be by
adverse currents driven apart Or whether we may both together reach
Some rich and rare Byzantium of the heart.
2) Their Reality
They had hardly left harbour when
one of them came to grief: The wind took him sailing on; but she struck a
reef.
9-19 February
1998
Too Many Goodbyes
The first 'Goodbye!' was
tender, The second still a treat; The third was rather jokey, The
fourth one much less sweet. The fifth, I scowled a little, The sixth I
felt in pain... The seventh broke our friendship - Don't mention her
again!
5 April
1998
You Took My Hand
'Driving over the bridge, we
entered A world full of myth and magic, Of tales full of joy or
tragic So I trust we are thoroughly centred On - on ...' But my
outer voice falters For sometimes everything alters, Sometimes love
comes like a flail Sometimes even words can fail. As the sun fled out
of sight And the world turned utterly white Then I found in you the
keeper Of reality much deeper (As we linked our arms in the snow)
Than the one we normally know; So when, later, you took my hand In a
movement quite unplanned So innocent, without art, You also took my
heart.
16 April
1998
Loving You
Though you never asked And I
never answered I love you more than the world can say More than enough
for tomorrow Tremendously for today And I'm sad to be going away;
'Cause I love you completely and wholly In an unregenerate way It's
kind of body and soul-ly And my eyes are out on a stalk For I love the
way that you kiss me And I love the way that you talk I love the way
that you bliss me And I love the way that you walk I love the way that
you listen And I love the way that you speak I love the way your eyes
glisten With hazel, witch-hazel I think 'Cause although I'm away for a
week I am under your spell my darling In my dreams we are cheek to
cheek On a dance-floor somewhere in heaven And although this seems
Over-The-Top You absolutely attract I love the way you are stacked
You are tender and clever and true Just stick to me like glue 'Cause I
want it never to stop.
1 May
1998
Poem
Written By Someone Else
On waking he abandoned His
rational pretensions Sensibly realizing He was in love. Thereafter
he devoted Whatever was left to him Of life and health To a
beautiful romance The echoes of which Though quite unplanned Full
of joy and tears Have already spanned A thousand years.
S.Else 1 May
2998
Fragment
..... had she wanted a
hard-bitten writer Wondering how to indict her On some charge or other?
[How could Such a fellow do what he should? Hard-bitten pride would
have wrecked Any remnant of being direct And he would have left her and
failed her, Never loved her, never mailed her.]
But (Thank God) someone else came
along Not quite what she had expected Not quite what her friends had
directed But gradually she was beguiled He knew what was right, what
was wrong He spoke as a man, not a child He had love in his heart and a
song And the song that he sang was so clear She was named 'My true
love' and 'My dear' She was told that he wanted her near.....
1 May
1998
For my Peers at Thanet
House
Instead of slipping back, and
back, and back Into that dismal place in which we lack All spontaneity,
all truth, all hope Of what it is which truly gives us scope, Thinking
it highly preferable to live In those routines of ours which seem to
give Security, stability and light, But which in fact perpetuate the
night - Instead of slipping back, this little band Whose grouping
seemed so curiously unplanned Who in September nervously began To learn
to live by quite a different plan Have found a new awareness, a new
scope Can face the future with a deal of hope No longer lonely
contemplating flight But walking hand-in-hand towards the light.
27 June
1998
Re: The Brothers Powys
Though almost never
quoted, Outranked, outclassed, outvoted By academic men, They come
and shyly tell me, They sidle up and tell me They use me - now and
then.
I therefore thank them
clearly: I warm to them most dearly And, not being avaricious, I
think it most propitious With feelings of propriety To give to the
Society< (That others new to Powys Should come to know what woe
is) The copyright to use Exactly as you choose.
I rest secure - their sister,
Their lovely youngest sister Asked how I knew these men? She said:
"Within your pages "My brothers live again."
24 August
1998
Some
old-fashioned lines for a new-fashioned friend
You came here falling like a star
to earth Bringing your plenty to a land of dearth Blazing with bravery
and light and lust For living - in a county turned to dust And
ashes by abominable sloth In word and thought, illimitable growth
(Which is our heritage) ruled out entire By syndicated thought and wholly
dire Dependence on the second-hand and grim Falsification of the truth
- each limb Most beautiful proclaims you to have come From some
far land of which the guardians, dumb In your respect (Or we'd have heard a
swell Of rumour and invention sweet to tell) Thought best we should not
know: dark history, Some dangerous and important mystery Wrapped up in
you? Of that I cannot guess. But this I know: I would not have you
less Than very dearest friend. For I can sense Behind each dear and
beautiful defence A true nobility: a loyal heart; Human, like all of
us; and yet apart For having some while wrestled at each breath With
subtly smiling but most ravenous death.
Stay here awhile: let many a
ripening moon Winter and Summer, January and June, Revisit you and
bathe you in her light - Whom to completely lose were endless night.
3-4 January
1999
For Greta at
Hawthornden
Towards the moment of parting
The truth attempts to take over - Although to be true or accurate or
new Might demand a degree of humanity and risk Some distance beyond my
current capacity. So I might meander on in my usual way With something
like: 'Greta, Gretl; Greta, Gretl'; Or is it possible that, just for
once, Betraying fifty years of romantic dreams I have a true estimate
of how things are, Giving hope of something less nonsensical?
Friendship, perhaps, and a pledge of honesty? Nothing is ever exactly what
it seems.
9 March
1999
A Difficult
House-Party
We met for coffee nightly We
scintillated brightly But nothing did or said. Instead of screaming
loudly We kept our tempers proudly: We said 'Good-night!' politely
And then we went to bed Wishing that we were dead.
4 March 1999 [last
line courtesy A.MacLean]
Titled
Greta, Great heart, To
hear your voice Made me rejoice. Dear stalwart friend Whom I shall
love Until the end.
Greta, Great heart, How
can I start?
If you could know Each debt I
owe Each love dismissed Each false love kissed...
And yet and yet - Why talk of
debt When you are kind And love is blind?
Greta, Great heart, Such
solace proves That where the queen of heaven moves She watches keenly
over all Those lovers whom she has in thrall Determined to
illuminate The good, the passable, the great With notions of a richer
fate Pre-eminent, predestinate Than they could hope to know alone.
So, sitting on a silver
throne And smiling sideways to the sea Sometimes, dear heart, remember
me.
31 March
1999
An Unsuccessful
Speech
'Dear heart and darling
friend 'Across the table-top 'My love to you I send - 'Your
dinner-party quite 'Reminds me, dear, how right 'It is to be at
ease 'With those whom we can please: 'Good fellowship, a dish 'Of
most delicious fish 'Good wine both white and red 'But above all', he
said - Striking a noble pose Though swaying on his toes, [We did
not like to think (Though wishing he would stop) He was the worse for
drink] 'But above all what ought 'To please - a glass of port - 'A
glass or two at least - 'Completes the perfect feast; 'And then perhaps
a kiss 'To consummate my bliss?' His swaying grew pronounced - Our
hostess looked askance On seeing him advance And finally announced
"Brother, your only chance "Is being kicked, not kissed - "You're
absolutely pissed!" We thought he took it well; He must have felt like
hell. He swayed a little more, And, smiling all the while A
beatific smile Slid gently to the floor Where he began to snore.
3 April
1999
Falling in Love
Darling, whom in some despair
Bridges burned Kisses barely returned I send home to home Not
knowing whether - Or do I? -
It's difficult all the same
It's a complex game Because, Darling, being yourself - With your laugh
and your bee-stung lips And your curves and your elegant hips And your
mind which I find Like the light of a day unforeseen Like your eyes
with a faint tinge of green And your heart which makes mine miss a beat
When you start to caress me with
truth With your figure of desperate grace When I look at your porcelain
face I feel - what do I feel?
That my senses reel That when
you walk in With a glorious unmistakeable scent of sin Damn
correctness, damn duty: You are sheer undeniable beauty You are life on
the wing, Wendy, And you make my heart sing.
20/21
November 1999
Ground Zero
That we, who lost the moon, the sun
The fleeting hour that was our own,
May sleep more quietly, recall
Not only when each tower fell,
The flame and ruin; but at length
Draw from our sacrifice some strength:
Courage to openly resist
Each sad, sick-hearted terrorist
Who seeks by violence to impose
Cowardly compliance on his foes;
Courage to live life unafraid
Undaunted by the bomb or blade;
Courage to say with every breath
‘The price of Freedom may be Death!’
Our Grave – yet not so grave a Fall,
That Truth for our Memorial.
September 2001
Weird
Rhymes (1): 'To a Lost Tyre'
O Tyre, be much accursed
For suffering that burst:
You left me in the lurch
When I was bravely dressed
In all my Sunday Best
And on my way to Church.
My bride-to-be has fled
My hopes of love are dead
And all because you failed
To remain round and sound -
O Tyre, who did your worst,
Though you are much dispersed
I'll try to have you found
And then I'll have you jailed!
2-4 February 2002
From
Catullus
Mourn, Gods and Goddesses
of Love:
Mourn, men who strive to emulate
Their nobler feelings about fate
Mourn, those below and those above:
A sparrow's dead -
but her delight
That sparrow, dear to my dear girl, Loved by her more than her own sight.
For it was honey to her soul The daughter of her sweet control
Who never left her mother's zone
Who as it hopped now here now there
Chirrupped to her and her alone - Who now the shadowy journey learns
Into that place without a sky From where philosophers deny
That any living thing returns...
My curse upon you, shadows of the dark,
Underworld demons preying on the light
Devouring all that's beautiful and bright.
You've stolen something that had beauty's spark:
That poor bird's life: a very evil act!
And from that evil follows this sad fact:
Because you have her sparrow in your keeping,
My darling's swollen eyes are red with weeping.
June 2002
Reply
to Rupert Brooke's 'The Funeral of Youth: Threnody'
'All except only Love',
the poet wrote
'Love had died long ago'.
Love dead? Not so -
After too many tears
Love may have slept awhile,
Her fitful sleep
Midwife to many fears -
But finally she woke:
Great-heartedly she spoke -
A new dawn broke.
2 August 2006
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