Read Collected Poems 1931-74 Online
Authors: Lawrence Durrell
The forest wears its coats
of oil-paint as lightly can
what only brush-strokes built,
feather and leaf and spray,
married by choice and plan.
Curve of the Danube's wrist
leans from its mossy bed,
takes the bias of earth with it
the camber of earth and sky,
divides with a ruler of lead.
Soft as an ant's patrol
fingers to fingers warm,
to relive in a favourite's touch,
warm as the oven-loaf,
to finger and wrist and arm.
We know that the dead forget:
the living reside in touch,
sweet consonance of a kiss,
or a letter from distant home,
says little and yet so much.
So much yet never enough
in the concert of night and day,
but revisit us like the dead
kisses that rise to our lips
confused in the river's spray.
Dead kisses revisit the living
in guises our bodies abet,
for mouth or elbow or thigh:
for the living must always remember
what the dead can never forget.
1955/
1951
Bosnia. November. And the mountain roads
Earthbound but matching perfectly these long
And passionate self-communings counter-march,
Balanced on scarps of trap, ramble or blunder
Over traverses of cloud: and here they move,
Mule-teams like insects harnessed by a bell
Upon the leaf-edge of a winter sky,
And down at last into this lap of stone
Between four cataracts of rock: a town
Peopled by sleepy eagles, whispering only
Of the sunburnt herdsman's hopeless ploy:
A sterile earth quickened by shards of rock
Where nothing grows, not even in his sleep,
Where minarets have twisted up like sugar
And a river, curdled with blond ice, drives on
Tinkling among the mule-teams and the mountaineers,
Under the bridges and the wooden trellises
Which tame the air and promise us a peace
Harmless with nightingales. None are singing now.
No history much? Perhaps. Only this ominous
Dark beauty flowering under veils,
Trapped in the spectrum of a dying style:
A village like an instinct left to rust,
Composed around the echo of a pistol-shot.
1955/
1951
âSpring' says your Alexandrian poet
âMeans time of the remission of the rose'
Now here at this tattered old café,
By the sea-wall, where so many like us
Have felt the revengeful power of life,
Are roses trapped in blue tin bowls.
I think of you somewhere among themâ
Other rosesâoutworn by our literature,
Made tenants of calf-love or else
The poet's portion, a black black rose
Coughed into the helpless lap of love,
Or fallen from a lapelâa night-club rose.
It would take more than this loving imagination
To claim them for you out of time,
To make them dense and fecund so that
Snow would never pocket them, nor would
They travel under glass to great sanatoria
And like a sibling of the sickness thrust
Flushed faces up beside a dead man's plate.
No, you should have picked one from a poem
Being written softly with a brushâ
The deathless ideogram for love we writers hunt.
Now alas the writing and the roses, Melissa,
Are nearly over: who will next remember
Their spring remission in kept promises,
Or even the true ground of their invention
In some dry heart or empty inkwell?
1955/
19
53
The Pleiades are sinking calm as paint,
And earth's huge camber follows out,
Turning in sleep, the oceanic curve,
Defined in concave like a human eye
Or cheek pressed warm on the dark's cheek,
Like dancers to a music they deserve.
This balcony, a moon-anointed shelf
Above a silent garden holds my bed.
I slept. But the dispiriting autumn moon,
In her slow expurgation of the sky
Needs company: is brooding on the dead,
And so am I now, so am I.
1955/
1953
(Belgrade)
19 February 1952
    So many mockers of the doctrine
    Turn away, try not to hear
    The antinomian butchers
    In the grape-vine of ideas.
    It is we who observe who suffer,
    We who confide who lie â¦
    They are pulling and snapping
    The disordered vine-limbs, Dionysus,
    The body of our body once divine,
    Replacing the coveted order of desire
    With all the lumber love can leave,
    A star entombed in flesh, desirelessness,
    In some ghostly bedroom rented for a night.
22 February 1952
    Connive, Connive,
    For the great wheel is turning
    Under the politics of the hive.
    Connive, for everywhere
    Hermits and patron-saints
    On the great star-wheel crucified
    Pinned out lie burning, burning,
    And life is being delivered to the half-alive.
24 February 1952
    Old cock-pheasants when you hit one
    Lumber and burst upon the ground,
    The body's plump contraption splits
    Their lagging rainbow into bits.
    So marriage can, by ripeness bound,
    From over-ripeness qualify
    To sick detachment in the mindâ
    Dreams bursting at the seams to die
    By colder coitus in the mind of God,
    Stitches ripped up which used to hold
    The modern heart from growing cold.
    Now logic founders, speech begins.
    Symbols sketch a swaying bridge
    Between the states at peace or war,
    Athens or Sparta fighting for
    What foolish head or fond heart wins.
    Much later will the lover coax
    Out of the bestiary of his heart
    The little hairy sexer, Pan,
    The turning-pointâpure laughter,
    To make the reckoning round and full
    If Jill comes tumbling after.
    He lies in his love in shadowless content
    As tongue in mouth, as poems in a skull.
27 February 1952
    Jupiter, so lucky when he lay
    Trampling among the roses: bodies
    Of young girls ⦠a cage of sighs
    Beside a drifting river-picture
    Was all the poet wished in youth;
    But later saw the glistening dewlap
    Of the man-bull, heard the cries,
    The squat consorts of the passion
    Twisted like figs into the legs
    Of washerwomen screeching on the Liffey,
    Soaping the flaccid thighs and dugs,
    Remagnetized again by thoughts of old
    Familiar, incoherent, measureless
    Contempts the grabbing flesh must
    Always hold, like thefts from human logic,
    And savour till the gums and spices fade.
3 January 1953
    Dear, behind the choking estuaries
    Of sleep or waking, in the acts
    Which dream themselves and make,
    Swollen under luminol, responsibilities
    Which no one else can take,
    I watch the faultless measure of your dying
    Into an unknown misused animal
    Held by the ropes and drugs; the puny
    Recipe society proposes when machines
    Break down. Love was our machine.
    And through each false connection I
    So clearly pierce to reach the God
    Infecting this machine, not ours but by
    Compulsion of the city and the times;
    A God forgetting slowly how to feel:
    A broken sex which, lying to itself,
    Could never hope to heal.
    It was so simple to observe the liars,
    The one impaled, and lying like a log,
    The other at some fountain-nipple drinking
    His art from the whole world, helplessly
    Disbanding reason like a thirsty dog.
6 January 1953
    Madness confides its own theology,
    An ape-world bleak in its custom:
    Not arbitrary, for even the delusive
    Lies concert inside their dissonance:
    And are apes less human than
    Humans are to each other? Answer.
    In clinic beds we reach to where
    All cultures intersect, inverted now
    By the hungry heart and jumbled out
    In friends or sculpture or kissing-stuff,
    Measured against the chattering
    Of gross primary desires, a code of needs
    Where Marxist poems are born and die perhaps.
    The white screens they have set up
    Like the mind's censor under Babel
    Are trying to keep from the white coats
    All possible foreknowledge of the enigma.
    But the infected face of loneliness
    Smiles back wherever mirrors droop and bleed.
9 January 1953
    Imagine we are the living who inhabit
    Freezing offices in a winter town,
    Who daily founder deeper in
    Our self-disdain being mirrored in
    Each others' complicated ways of dying.
    Here neither brick nor glass can warm
    The sanitary dust of central heating,
    And the damp air like a poultice wets
    The fears of living which thought begets.
    Here we feed, as prisoners feed, spiders
    Important to the reason as Bruce's was;
    Huge sprawling emotions kept in bottles
    Below the civil surface of the mind,
    That snap and sway upon the webs
    Of tearless resignation bought with sleep.
    Some few have what I have:
    Silent gold pressure of eyes
    Belonging to one deeply hurt, deeply aware.
    Truly though we never speak
    The past has marked us each
    In different lives contending for each other:
    We bear like ancient marble well-heads
    Marks of the ropes they lowered in us,
    Telling of the concerns of time,
    The knife of feeling in the art of love.
12 January 1953
    So at last we come to the writer's
    Middle years, the hardest yet to bear,
    All will agree: for it is now
    He condenses, prunes and tries to order
    The experiences which gorged upon his youth.
    Every wrinkle now earned is gifted,
    Every grey hair tolls. He matches now
    Old kisses to new, and in the bodies
    Of younger learners throws off his sperm
    Like lumber just to ease the weight
    Of sighing for their youth, his abandoned own;
    And in the coital slumber poaches
    From lips and tongues the pollen
    Of youth, to dust the licence of his art.
    You cannot guess how he has been waiting
    For these years, these ripe and terrible
    Years of the
agon;
with the athlete's
    Calm foreknowledge of a deathly ripeness,
    Facing perhaps a public death by blows,
    Or a massive sprain in the centre of his mind,
    The whole world; his champion fever glows
    With all the dark misgivings of the bout.
    But now even fear cannot despoil the body
    And will, trained for the even contest,
    Fed by the promise of his country's laurels.
    So, having dispossessed himself, and being
    Now for the first time prepared to die
    He feels at last trained for the second life.
    1955/
1954
You gone, the mirrors all reverted,
Lay banging in the empty house,
Redoubled their efforts to impede
Waterlogged images of faces pleading.
So Fortunatus had a mirror which
Imperilled his reason when it broke;
The sleepers in their dormitory of glass
Stirred once and sighed but never woke.
Time amputated so will bleed no more
But flow like refuse now in clocks
On clinic walls, in libraries and barracks,
Not made to spend but kill and nothing more.
Yet mirrors abandoned drink like ponds:
(Once they resumed the childhood of love)
And overflowing, spreading, swallowing
Like water light, show one averted face,
As in the capsule of the human eye
Seen at infinity, the outer end of time,
A man and woman lying sun-bemused
In a blue vineyard by the Latin sea,
Steeped in each other's minds and breathing there
Like wicks inhaling deep in golden oil.
1955/
1954