Read Collected Poems 1931-74 Online
Authors: Lawrence Durrell
Come, meet me in some dead caféâ
A puff of cognac or a sip of smoke
Will grant a more prolific light,
Say there is nothing to revoke.
A veteran with no arm will press
A phantom sorrow in his sleeve;
The aching stump may well insist
On memories it can't relieve.
Late cats, the city's thumbscrews twist.
Night falls in its profuse derision,
Brings candle-power to younger lives,
Cancels in me the primal vision.
Come, random with me in the rain,
In ghastly harness like a dream,
In rainwashed streets of saddened dark
Where nothing moves that does not seem.
1973/
1971
Outside us smoulder the great
World issues about which nothing
Can be done, at least by us two;
Inside, the smaller area of a life
Entrusted to us, as yet unendowed
Even by a plan for worship. Well,
If thrift should make her worldly
Remind her that time is boundless,
And for call-girls like business-men, money.
Redeem pleasure, then, with a proximate
Loveâthe other problems, like the ruins
Of man's estate, death of all goodness,
Lie entombed with me here in this
Oldfashioned but convincing death-bed.
Her darkness, her eye are both typical
Of a region long since plunged into
Historic ruin; yet disinherited, she doesn't care
Being perfect both as person and as thing.
All winter now I shall lie suffocating
Under the débris of this thought.
1973/
197
1
Huit
heurs
â¦
honte
heurs
⦠supper will be cold.
Sex no substitute for
Science no worship for â¦
At night seeing lights and crouching
Figures round the swimming pool, rapt.
They were fishing for her pearls,
Her necklace had broken while she swam.
âDarling, I bust my pearls.'
But all the time I was away
In sweet and headlong Greece I tried
To write you only the syntax failed,
Each noun became a nascent verb
And all verbs dormant adjectives,
Everything sleeping among the scattered pearls.
Corpses with the marvellous
Property of withoutness
Reign in the whole abundance of the breath.
Each mood has its breathing, so does death.
Soft they sleep and corpsely wise
Scattered the pearls that were their eyes.
Newly mated man and wine
In each other's deaths combine.
Somebody meets everything
While poems in their cages sing.
1973/
1971
Your ship will be leaving Penang
For Lisbon on the fourteenth,
When I have started pointedly
Living with somebody else.
Yet I can successfully imagine a
Star-crossed circumference of water
Providing a destiny for travellersâ
Thoughts neither to pilfer nor squander
During the postcard-troubled nights.
How stable the feeling of being lost grows!
The ocean of memory is ample too,
It wheels about as you crawl over the surface
Of the globe, having cabled away a stormy wish.
Our judgement, our control were beyond all praise.
So prescient were we, it must prove something.
Madam, I presume upon somewhere to continue
Existing round you, say the Indian Ocean
Where life might be fuller of
Such rich machinery that you mightn't flinch;
And how marvellous to be followed
Round the world by a feeling of utter
Sufficiency, tinged a little, I don't doubt,
With self-righteousness, a calming emotion!
I too have been much diminished by wanting;
Now limit my vision to a sufficient loveliness,
To abdicate? But it was never our case,
Though somewhere I feel creep in
The word you said you hated most: âNevertheless'.
Well, say it under whatever hostile stars you roam,
Embrace the blue vertigo of the old wish.
And if it gets too much for me
I can always do the other thing, remember?
1973/
1
971
At four the dawn mistral usually
A sleep-walking giant sways and crackles
The house, a vessel big with sail.
One head full of poems, cruiser of light,
Cracks open the pomegranate to reveal
The lining of all today's perhapses.
Far away in her carnal fealty sleeps
La
Môme
in her tiny
chambre
de
bonne.
âLe
vent
se
lève
â¦
Il
faut
tenter
de
vivre.
'
I have grave thoughts about nothingness,
Hold no copyright in Jesus like that girl.
An autopsy would fuse the wires of pleading.
It is simply not possible to thank life.
The universe seems a huge hug without arms.
In foul rapture dawn breaks on grey olives.
Poetry among other afflictions
Is the purest selfishness.
I am making her a small scarlet jazz
For the cellar where they dance
To a wheezy accordion, with a one-eyed man.
Written to a cheeky begging voice.
            Â
Moi
je
suis
            Â
Annie
Verneuil
            Â
Dit
Annie
La
Môme
            Â
Parfois
je
fais
la
vie
            Â
Parfois
je
chome
        Â
Premier
Prix
de
Saloperie
        Â
De
Paris
Ã
Rome
            Â
Annie
La
Môme
        Â
Fléau
du
flic
le
soir
        Â
Sur
La
Place
Vendôme
,
            Â
Annie
Verneuil
            Â
Annie
La
Môme
Freedom is choice: choice bondage.
Where will I next be when the mistral
Rises in sullen trumpets on the hills of bone?
1973/
1971
Be silent, old frog.
Let God compound the issue as he must,
And dog eat dog
Unto the final desecration of man's dust.
The just will be devoured by the unjust.
1973/
1971
The big rivers are through with me, I guess;
Can't walk by Thames any more
But the inexpressible sadness settles
Like soft soot on dusk, becoming one whole thing,
Matchless as twilight and as featureless.
Yes, the big rivers are through with me, I guess;
Nor the mind-propelling, youth-devouring ones
Like Nile or Seine, or black Brahmaputra
Where I was born and never went back again
To stars printed in shining tar.
Yes, the big rivers, except the one of sorrows
Which winds to forts of calm where dust rebukes
The vagaries of minds in silent poses.
I have been washed up here or there,
A somewhere soon becoming an empty everywhere.
My memory of memories goes far astray,
Was it today, or was it yesterday?
I am thinking of things I would rather avoid
Alone in furnished rooms
Listening for those nymphs I've always waited for,
So silent, sitting upright, looking so unowned
And working my destiny on their marble looms.
1973/
1971
Time quietly compiling us like sheaves
Turns round one day, beckons the special few,
With one bird singing somewhere in the leaves,
Someone like K. or somebody like you,
Free-falling target for the envious thrust,
So tilting into darkness go we must.
Thus the fading writer signing off
Sees in the vast perspectives of dispersal
His words float off like tiny seeds,
Wind-borne or bird-distributed notes,
To the very end of loves without rehearsal,
The stinging image riper than his deeds.
Yours must have set out like ancient
Colonists, from Delos or from Rhodes,
To dare the sun-gods, found great entrepôts,
Naples or Rio, far from man's known abodes,
To confer the quaint Grecian script on other men;
A new Greek fire ignited by your pen.
How marvellous to have done it and then left
It in the lost property office of the loving mind,
The secret whisper those who listen find.
You show us all the way the great ones went,
In silences becalmed, so well they knew
That even to die is somehow to invent.
1973/
1972
A thirst for green, because too long deprived
Of water in the stone garrigues, is natural,
Accumulates and then at last gets sated
By this lake which parodies a new life
With a boat outside the window, breathing:
Negative of a greater thirst no doubt,
Lying on slopes of water just multiplying
In green verdure, distributed at night
All on a dark floor, the sincere flavour of stars â¦
This we called Vega, a sly map-reference
Coded in telegrams the censored name to
âVega next tenth of May. Okay?'
âOkay.' âOkay.' You came.
The little train which joined then severed us
Clears Domodossola at night, doodles a way,
Tingling a single elementary bell,
Powdered with sequins of new snow,
To shamble at midnight into Stresa's blue.
One passenger only, a woman. You.
The fixed star of the ancients was another Vega,
A candle burning high in the alps of heaven,
Shielded by rosy fingers on some sill
Above some darkly sifted lake. They also knew
This silence trying to perfect itself in words.
Ah! The beautiful sail so unerringly on towards death
Once they experience the pith of this peerless calm.
1973/
1972
Katharine, Queen Eleanor's shadow hovers over you
And your birthdays must take a little from her history:
Be like her, both wise and gay
And keep the little touch of tragedy
Like swords of the soul.
1980/
1972
For
âButtons
'
Seemingly upended in the sky,
Cloudless as minds asleep
One careless cemetery buzzes on and on
As if her tombstones were all hives
Overturned by the impatient deadâ
We imagined they had stored up
The honey of their immortality
In the soft commotion the black bees make.
Below us, far away, the road to Paris.
You pour some wine upon a tomb.
The bees drink with us, the dead approve.
It is weeks ago now and we are back
In our burnt and dusty Languedoc,
Yet often in the noon-silences
I hear the Vaumort bees, taste the young wine,
Catch a smile hidden in sighs.
In the long grass you found a ring, remember?
A child's toy ring. Yes, I know that whenever
I want to be perfectly alone
With the memory of you, of that whole day
It's to Vaumort that I'll be turning.
1980/
1972
My lovely left-handed lover
Will be riding down from Geneva
On the afternoon Catalan bound for Barcelona.
I'll catch her all honeygold at Nîmes
And embrace her on behalf of the city council,
On behalf of Apollinaire, on behalf of Lou.
Ah, Lou, Lou, she is somewhat like you.
My lovely slowcoach, come, I'll teach you.
The Geneva train is faster than a river.
I am no laborious and insipid drone,
But an Irish poet, and thus perfectible.
Together we will submit
To the mesmerism of objects
Painted or hewnâand without too much cheating.
And all this nonsense about women's liberation
Will fade into the fifty-fifty of kisses shared.
Let us be enemies of intellectual cosiness.
Every embrace is an empirical exchange of vitamins.
Your last postcard from the dark lake read:
  Â
âSe
réaliser?
Oui.
Mais
comment?
   Darling, I am buying a clockwork mouse
   To show my independence from men.
      Signed:
A REAL WOMAN
.'
Perhaps now do you see why?
1980/
1972