Read Collected Poems 1931-74 Online
Authors: Lawrence Durrell
We, my dear Melissa, are only typics of
This Graeco-Roman asylum, dedicated here
To an age of Bogue, where the will sticks
Like a thorn under the tongue,
Making our accent pain and not completeness.
Do not interrupt me ⦠Let me finish:
Madmen established in the intellect
By the domestic error of a mind that arranges,
Explains, but can never sufficiently include:
Punishes, exclaims, but never completes its arc
To enter the Round. Nor all the cabals
Of pity and endurance in the circus of art
Will change it till the mainspring will is broken.
Yet the thing can be done, as you say, simply
By sitting and waiting, the mystical leap
Is only a figure for it, it involves not daring
But the patience, being gored, not to cry out.
But perhaps even the desire itself is dying.
I should like that: to make an end of it.
It is time we did away with this kind of suffering,
It has become a pose and refuge for the lazy:
As for me I must do as I was born
And so must you: upon the smaller part of the circle
We desire fulfilment in the measure of our gift:
You kiss and make: while I withdraw and plead.
1948/
1948
Â
Zarian was saying: Florence is youth,
And after it Ravenna, age,
Then Venice, second-childhood.
The pools of burning stone where time
And water, the old siege-masters,
Have run their saps beneath
A thousand saddle-bridges,
Puffed up by marble griffins drinking,
And all set free to float on loops
Of her canals like great intestines
Now snapped off like a berg to float,
Where now, like others, you have come alone,
To trap your sunset in a yellow glass,
And watch the silversmith at work
Chasing the famous salver of the bay â¦
Here sense dissolves, combines to print only
These bitten choirs of stone on water,
To the rumble of old cloth bells,
The cadging of confetti pigeons,
A boatman singing from his long black coffin â¦
To all that has been said before
You can add nothing, only that here,
Thick as a brushstroke sleep has laid
Its fleecy unconcern on every visage,
At the bottom of every soul a spoonful of sleep.
1955/
1950
(Forio d'Ischia)
All our religions founder, you
remain, small sunburnt
deus
loci
safe in your natal shrine,
landscape of the precocious southern heart,
continuously revived in passion's common
tragic and yet incorrigible spring:
in every special laughter overheard,
your specimen is everythingâ
accents of the little cackling god,
part animal, part insect, and part bird.
This dust, this royal dust, our mother
modelled by spring-belonging rain
whose soft blank drops console
a single vineyard's fever or a region
falls now in soft percussion on the earth's
old stretched and wrinkled vellum skin:
each drop could make one think
a footprint of the god, but out of season,
yet in your sudden coming know
life lives itself without recourse to reason.
On how many of your clement springs
the fishermen set forth, the foresters
resign their empty glasses, rise,
confront the morning star, accept
the motiveless patronage of all you areâ
desire recaptured on the sea or land
in the fables of fish, or grapes held up,
a fistful of some champion wine
glowing like a stained-glass window
in a drunkard's trembling hand.
All the religions of the dust can tellâ
this body of damp clay that cumbered so
Adam, and those before, was given him,
material for his lamp and spoon and body
to renovate your terra cotta shrines
whose cupids unashamed
to make a fable of the common lot
curled up like watchsprings in a kiss,
or turned to
putti
for a lover's bed,
or
amorini
for a shepherd's little cot.
Known before the expurgation of gods
wherever nature's carelessness exposed
her children to the fear of the unknownâ
in families gathered by hopeless sickness
about a dying candle, or in sailors
on tilting decks and under shrouded planets:
wherever the unknown has displaced the known
you encouraged in the fellowship of wine
of love and husbandry: and in despair
only to think of you and you were there.
The saddle-nose, the hairy thighs
composed these vines, these humble vines,
so dedicated to themselves yet offering
in the black froth of grapes their increment
to pleasure or to sadness where a poor
peasant at a husky church-bell's chime
crosses himself: on some cracked pedestal
by the sighing sea sets eternally up,
item by item, his small mid-day meal,
garlic and bread, the wine-can and the cup.
Â
Image of our own dust in wine!
drinkers of that royal dust pressed out
drop by cool drop in science and in love
into a model of the absconding god's
imageâhuman like our own. Or else in other
mixtures, of breath in kisses dropped
under the fig's dark noonday lantern, yes,
lovers like tenants of a wishing-well
whose heartbeats labour through all time has stopped.
Your panic fellowship is everywhere,
Not only in love's first great illness known,
but in the exile of objects lost
to context, broken hearts, spilt milk,
oaths disregarded, laws forgotten:
or on the seashore some old pilot's
capital in rags of sail, snapped oars,
water-jars choked with sand,
and further on, half hidden, the fatal letter
in the cold fingers of some marble hand.
Deus
loci
your provinces extend
throughout the domains of logic,
beyond the eyes watching from dusty murals,
or the philosopher's critical impatience
to understand, to be done with life:
beyond beyond even the mind's dark spools
in a vine-wreath or an old wax cross
you can become the nurse and wife of fools,
their actions and their nakednessâ
all the heart's profit or the loss.Â
So today, after many years, we meet
at this high window overlooking
the best of Italy, smiling under rain,
that rattles down the leaves like sparrow-shot,
scatters the reapers, the sunburnt girls,
rises in the sour dust of this table,
these books, unfinished lettersâall
refreshed again in you O spirit of place,
Presence long since divined, delayed, and waited for,
And here met face to face.
1955/
1950
Stavro's dead. A truant vine
Grows out of him at either end
Like muscles through the trunk and spine
For wine was Stavro's closest friend.
Up through the barrel of the chest
To scatter on his polished dome
A vine-leaf from the poet's crown.
The pint-pot was his only home.
Out of this confusing paste
The best of us are only made,
Sleep and sloth and wine were his
Who drank and drank and never paid.
Beauty vomit truth and waste
Somehow joined to give him grace
Who clasped the sky's blue demijohn
Drunk, in a drowning man's embrace.
Silenus of these olive-groves
He broached a wine-dark universe
And tasted on the crater's brim
Mother lover hearth and nurse.
The vulgar grape his earthly task:
Wine was a cradle, muse and guide,
Till body like some leather flask
Matured a laughing sun inside.
His bounty was life's usufruct:
Such lips to lay at nature's breast
With earth below and sky above,
Till tapsters lay us all to rest.
Stained tablecloths for epitaphs!
Set us full glasses nose to nose!
Good drunkards, pledge him with your laughs
Before the city's taverns close.
1968/
1950
You saw them, Sabina? Did you see them?
Yet the education of this little cloud
Full of neglect, allowed remissly so to lie
Unbrushed in some forgotten corner
Of a Monday-afternoon-in-April sky â¦
The rest abandoned it in passing by,
The swollen red-eyed country-mourners,
Unbarbered, marching on some Friday-the-thirteenth.
They knew it was not of the savage
Winter company, this tuffet for a tired cherub,
But a dear belonging of the vernal age,
Say spring, provinces of the nightingale,
Say love, the ministry of all distresses,
Say youth, Sabina, let us call it youthâ
All the white capes of fancy seen afar!
1955/
1950
Trembling they appear, the Siren isles,
Bequeathing lavender and molten rose,
Reflecting in the white caves of our sails
Melodious capes of fancy and of terror,
Where now the singers surface at the prow,
Begin the famous, pitiless, wounded singing â¦
Ulysses watching, like many a hero since,
Thinks: âVoyages and privations!
The loutish sea which swallows up our loves,
Lying windless under a sky of lilac,
Far from our home, the longed-for landfall â¦
By God! They choose their time, the Sirens.'
Every poet and hero has to face them,
The glittering temptresses of his distraction,
The penalties which seek him for a hostage.
Homer and Milton: both were punished in their gift.
1955/
1951
Scent like a river-pilot led me there:
Bedroom darkness spreading like a moss,
The polished wells of floors in blackness
Gave no reflections of the personage,
Or the half-open door, but whispered on:
âSkin be supple, hair be smooth,
Lips and character attend
In mnemonic solitude.
Kisses leave no fingerprints.'
âAnswer.' But no answer came.
âBeauty hunted leaves no clues.'
Yet as if rising from a still,
Perfume whispered at the sill,
All those discarded husks of thought
Hanging untenanted like gowns,
Rinds of which the fruit had gone â¦
Still the long chapter led me on.
Still the clock beside the bed
Heart-beat after heart-beat shed.
1955/
1951
Er
ce
â¦
Er
ce
â¦
Er
ce
Primigravida
curled like a hoop in sleep
unearthly of manufacture,
tissue of blossom and clay
bone the extract of air
fountain of nature.
softly knitted by kisses,
added to stitch by stitch,
by sleep of the dying heart,
by water and wool and air,
gather a fabric rich.
earth contracted to earth
in ten toes: the cardinals.
in ten fingers: the bishops.
ears by two, eyes by two,
watch the mirror watching you,
      and now hush
the nightwalkers bringing peace,
seven the badges of grace
five the straw caps of talent,
one the scarf of desire, go
mimic your mother's lovely face.
1955/
1951
   The baby emperor,
reigning on tuffet, throne or pot
in his minority knows hardly what
   he is, or is not,
   sagely he confers
his card of humours like a vane,
veering by fair to jungle foul
   so shapes his course
through variable back to fine again.
      Then
fingers dangle over him: beanstalks,
chins like balconies impend:
kisses like blank thunder bang
   above the little mandarin,
or like a precious ointment prest
from tubes are different kisses
   to the suffrage of a grin.
   He can outface
a hundred generations with a yawn
   this Faustus of the pram,
spreadeagled like a starfish, or
   some uncooked prawn
with pink and toothless mandible
   advance the proposition:
      âI
   cry, therefore I am.'
   the baby emperor
   O lastly see
in exile on his favourite St. Helena,
corner of a lost playground gazing
   into a dark well,
manufacturing images of a lost past,
expense of spirit in a waste of longing,
   sea-nymphs hourly
   ring his knell.
   small famulus of Time!
born to the legation of our dark unknowing
   the seed was not of your
sowing, nor did you make these tall
   untoppled walls
to sit here like a prisoner remembering
   only as a poem now
   the past, the white breasts
that once leaned over you like waterfalls.
1955/
1951