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    Collected Poems 1931-74

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    Bearing in rivers upside down

      The myrtle and the olive, in ruins

      The faces of the innocents in wells.

      Salt and garlic, water and dry bread,

      Greek bread from the comb they knew

      Like an element in sculpture:

      By these red aerial cherries,

      Or flawed grapes painted green

      But pouted into breasts: as well

      By those great quarries of the blood—

      The beating crimson hearts of the grenades:

      All far beyond the cupidity of verses

      Or the lechery of images to tell.

      Here worlds were confirmed in him.

      Differences that matched like cloth

      Between the darkness and the inner light,

      Moved on the undivided breath of blue.

      Formed moving, trees asserted here

      Nothing but simple comparisons to

      The artist’s endearing eye.

      Sleep. Napkins folded after grace.

      Veins of stealing water

      By the unplumbed ruins, never finding peace.

      A watershed, a valley of tombs,

      Never finding peace.

      ‘Look’ she might say ‘Press here

      With your fingers at the temples.

      Are they not the blunt uncut horns

      Of the small naked Ionian fauns?’

      Much later, moving in a dark,

      Snow-lit landscape softly

      In her small frock walked his daughter

      And a simile came into his mind

      Of lovers, like swimmers lost at sea,

      Exhausted in each other’s arms,

      Urgent for land, but treading water.

      IX

      Red Polish mouth,

      Lips that as for the flute unform,

      Gone round on nouns or vowels,

      To utter the accepting, calm

      ‘Yes’, or make terrible verbs

      Like ‘I adore, adore’.

      Persuader, so long hunted

      By your wild pack of selves,

      Past peace of mind or even sleep,

      So longed for and so sought,

      May the divider always keep

      Like unshed tears in lashes

      Love, the undeclarèd thought.

      X

      Athens. Katsimbalis, Wallace and Anna Southam.

      Seferiades Stephanides

      Now earth turns her cold shoulders to us,

      Autumn with her wild packs

      Comes down to the robbing of the flowers.

      On this unstained sky, printless

      Snow moves crisp as dreamers’ fingers,

      And the rate of passion or tenderness

      In this island house is absolute.

      Within a time of reading

      Here is all my growth

      Through the bodies of other selves,

      In books, by promise or perversity

      My mutinous crew of furies—their pleading

      Threw up at last the naked sprite

      Whose flesh and noise I am,

      Who is my jailor and my inward night.

      ‘Anya, my angel, my darling. This is an act of folly I’m committing, a feebleness, a crime, I know it, but …’

      Dostoevsky’s Letters to his wife

      In Europe, bound by Europe,

      I saw them moving, the possessed

      Fëdor and Anna, the last

      Two vain explorers of our guilt,

      Turn by turn holding the taws,

      Made addicts of each other lacking love,

      Friendless embittered and alone.

      The lesser pities held them back

      Like mice in secrecies,

      Yet through introspection and disease,

      Held on to the unflinching bone,

      The sad worn ring of Anna,

      Loyal to filth and weakness,

      Hammered out on this slender bond,

      Fëdor’s raw cartoons and episodes.

      By marriage with this ring,

      Companioned each their darkness.

      In cracked voices we can hear

      These hideous mommets now

      Like westering angels over Europe sing.

      XI

      So knowledge has an end,

      And virtue at the last an end,

      In the dark field of sensibility

      The unchanging and unbending;

      As in aquariums gloomy

      On the negative’s dark screen

      Grow the shapes of other selves,

      So groaned for by the heart,

      So seldom grasped if seen.

      Love bears you. Time stirs you.

      Music at midnight makes a ground,

      Or words on silence so perplex

      In hidden meanings there like bogies

      Waiting the expected sound.

      Art has limits and life limits

      Within the nerves that support them.

      So better with the happy

      Discover than with the wise

      Who teach the sad valour

      Of endurance through the seasons,

      In change the unchanging

      Death by compromise.

      XII

      Now darkness comes to Europe

      Dedicated by a soft unearthly jazz.

      The greater hearts contract their joys

      By silence to the very gem,

      While the impertinent reformers,

      Barbarians with secretaries move,

      Whom old Cavafy pictured,

      Whom no war can remove.

      Alexandria ‘The mythical Yellow Emperor, first exponent of the Tao’.

      Classical Chinese Philosophy

      Through the ambuscades of sex,

      The follies of the will, the tears,

      Turning, a personal world I go

      To where the yellow emperor once

      Sat out the summer and the snow,

      And searching in himself struck oil,

      Published the first great Tao

      Which all confession can only gloze

      And in the Consciousness can only spoil.

      Apparent opposition of the two

      Where unlocked numbers show their fabric,

      He laid his finger to the map,

      And where the signs confuse,

      Defined the Many and the None

      As base reflections of the One.

      ‘Duality, the great European art-subject, which is resolved by the Taoist formulas’.

      Anaïs Nin

      What bifid Hamlet in the maze

      Wept to find; the döppelgänger

      Goethe saw one morning go

      Over the hill ahead; the man

      So gnawed by promises who shared

      The magnificent responses of Rimbaud.

      All that we have sought in us,

      The artist by his greater cowardice

      In sudden brush-strokes gave us clues—

      Hamlet and Faust as front-page news.

      The yellow emperor first confirmed

      By one Unknown the human calculus,

      Where feeling and idea,

      Must fall within this space,

      This personal landscape built

      Within the Chinese circle’s calm embrace.

      ‘The Continuous I behind discontinuous Me’s’.

      E. Graham Howe

      Dark Spirit, sum of all

      That has remained unloved,

      Gone crying through the world:

      Source of all manufacture and repair,

      Quicken the giving-spring

      In ferns and birds and ordinary people

      That all deeds done may share,

      By this our temporal sun,

      The part of living that is loving,

      Your dancing, a beautiful behaviour.

      Darkness, who contain

      The source of all this corporal music,

      On the great table of the Breath

      Our opposites in pity bear,

      Our measure of perfection or of pain,

     
    Both trespassers in you, that then

      Our Here and Now become your Everywhere.

      XIII

      The old yellow Emperor

      With defective sight and matted hair

      His palace fell to ruins

      But his heart was in repair.

      Veins like imperfect plumbing

      On his flesh described a leaf.

      His palms were mapped with cunning

      Like geodesies of grief.

      His soul became a vapour

      And his limbs became a stake

      But his ancient heart still visits us

      In Lawrence or in Blake.

      XIV

      All cities plains and people

      Reach upwards to the affirming sun,

      All that’s vertical and shining,

      Lives well lived,

      Deeds perfectly done,

      Reach upwards to the royal pure

      Affirming sun.

      Accident or error conquered

      By the gods of luck or grace,

      Form and face,

      Tribe or caste or habit,

      All are aspects of the one

      Affirming race.

      Ego, my dear, and id

      Lie so profoundly hid

      In space-time void, though feeling,

      While contemporary, slow,

      We conventional lovers cheek to cheek

      Inhaling and exhaling go.

      The rose that Nostradamus

      In his divining saw

      Break open as the world;

      The city that Augustine

      Founded in moral law,

      By our anguish were compelled

      To urge, to beckon and implore.

      Dear Spirit, should I reach,

      By touch or speech corrupt,

      The inner suffering word,

      By weakness or idea,

      Though you might suffer

      Feel and know,

      Pretend you do not hear.

      XV

      Bombers bursting like pods go down

      And the seed of Man stars

      This landscape, ancient but no longer known.

      Only the critic perseveres

      Within his ant-like formalism

      By deduction and destruction steers;

      Only the trite reformer holds his own.

      See looking down motionless

      How clear Athens or Bremen seem

      A mass of rotten vegetables

      Firm on the diagram of earth can lie;

      And here you may reflect how genus epileptoid

      Knows his stuff; and where rivers

      Have thrown their switches and enlarged

      Our mercy or our knowledge of each other

      Wonder who walks beside them now and why,

      And what they talk about.

      There is nothing to hope for, my Brother.

      We have tried hoping for a future in the past.

      Nothing came out of that past

      But the reflected distortion and some

      Enduring, and understanding, and some brave.

      Into their cool embrace the awkward and the sinful

      Must be put for they alone

      Know who and what to save.

      XVI

      Small temptations now—to slumber and to sleep,

      Where the lime-green, odourless

      And pathless island waters

      Crossing and uncrossing, partnerless

      By hills alone and quite incurious

      Their pastures of reflection keep.

      For Prospero remains the evergreen

      Cell by the margin of the sea and land,

      Who many cities, plains, and people saw

      Yet by his open door

      In sunlight fell asleep

      One summer with the Apple in his hand.

      1946/1946

      RODINI

      Windless plane-trees above Rodini

      To the pencil or the eye are tempters

      Where of late trees have become ears in leaf

      Curved for the cicada’s first monotony.

      Hollow the comb, mellow the sweetness

      Amber the honey-spoil, drink, drink.

      In these windless unechoing valleys

      The mind slips like a chisel-hand

      Touching the surface of this clement blue

      Yet must not damage the solitary Turk

      Gathering his team and singing, in whose brain

      The same disorder and the loneliness—

      The what-we-have-in-common of us all.

      Is there enough perhaps to found a world?

      Then of what you said once, the passing

      Of something on the road beyond the tombstones

      Reflecting on dark hair with its sudden theft

      Of blue from the darkness of violets

      And below the nape of the neck a mole

      All mixed in this odourless water-clock of hours.

      So one is grateful, yes, to the ancient Greeks

      For the invention of time, lustration of penitents,

      Not so much for what they were

      But for where we lie under the windless planes.

      1948/1946

      IN THE GARDEN: VILLA CLEOBOLUS

      The mixtures of this garden

      Conduct at night the pine and oleander,

      Perhaps married to dust’s thin edge

      Or lime where the cork-tree rubs

      The quiet house, bruising the wall:

      And dense the block of thrush’s notes

      Press like a bulb and keeping time

      In this exposure to the leaves,

      And as we wait the servant comes,

      A candle shielded in the warm

      Coarse coral of her hand, she weaves

      A pathway for her in the golden leaves,

      Gathers the books and ashtrays in her arm

      Walking towards the lighted house,

      Brings with her from the uninhabited

      Frontiers of the darkness to the known

      Table and tree and chair

      Some half-remembered passage from a fugue

      Played from some neighbour’s garden

      On an old horn-gramophone,

      And you think: if given once

      Authority over the word,

      Then how to capture, praise or measure

      The full round of this simple garden,

      All its nonchalance at being,

      How to adopt and raise its pleasure?

      Press as on a palate this observed

      And simple shape, like wine?

      And from the many undeserved

      Tastes of the mouth select the crude

      Flavour of fruit in pottery

      Coloured among this lovely neighbourhood?

      Beyond, I mean, this treasure hunt

      Of selves, the pains we sort to be

      Confined within the loving chamber of a form,

      Within a poem locked and launched

      Along the hairline of the normal mind?

      Perhaps not this: but somehow, yes,

      To outflank the personal neurasthenia

      That lies beyond in each expiring kiss:

      Bring joy, as lustrous on this dish

      The painted dancers motionless in play

      Spin for eternity, describing for us all

      The natural history of the human wish.

      1948/1947

      ETERNAL CONTEMPORARIES: SIX PORTRAITS

      I

      MANOLI OF COS

      Down there below the temple

      Where the penitents scattered

      Ashes of dead birds, Manoli goes

      In his leaky boat, a rose tied to the rudder.

      This is not the rose of all the world,

      Nor the rose of Nostradamus or of Malory:

      Nor is it Eliot’s clear northern rose of the mind,

      But precisely and unequivocally

      The red rose Manoli picked himself

      From the vocabulary of roses on the hill by Cefalû.

      1948/1947

     
    ; II

      MARK OF PATMOS

      Mark has crossed over to Mount Olivet,

      Putting aside the banneret and the drum.

      He inhabits now that part of himself

      Which lay formerly desolate and uncolonized.

      He works that what is to pass may come

      And the birth of the common heart be realized.

      What passed with him? A flower dropped

      In the boat by a friend, the cakes

      His sister brought with the unposted letter.

      Yet all the island loafers watched, disturbed,

      The red sails melt into the sky, distended,

      And each turned angrily to his lighted house

      Feeling, not that something momentous

      Had begun, but that their common childhood

      Had foundered in the Syrian seas and ended.

      1948/1947

      III

      BASIL THE HERMIT

      Banished from the old roof-tree Patmos

      Where the dynasts gathered honey,

      Like dancing bears, with smoking rituals,

      Or skimmed the fat of towns with levy-money,

      Uncaring whether God or Paradise exist,

      Laid up themselves estates in providence

      While greed crouched in each hairy fist,

      Basil, the troubled flower of scepticism,

      Chose him a pelt, and a cairn of chilly stone,

      Became the author of a famous schism:

      A wick for oil, a knife, a broken stool

      Were all, this side of hell, he dared to own.

      For twenty years in Jesus went to school.

      Often, looking up, he saw them there

      As from some prism-stained pool:

      Dark dots like birds along the battlements,

     


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