Read Lynette Roberts: Collected Poems Online
Authors: Lynette Roberts
To the village of lace and stone
Came strangers. I was one of these
Always observant and slightly obscure.
I roamed the hills of bird and bone
Rescuing bees from under the storm:
Five hills rocked and four homes fell
The day I remember the raid so well.
Eyes shone like cups chipped and stiff
The living bled the dead lay in their grief
Cows, sheep, horses, all had got struck
Black as bird wounds, red as wild duck.
Dead
as icebone breaking the hedge.
Dead
as soil failing of good heart.
Dead
as trees quivering with shock
At the hot death from the plane.
O the cold loss of cattle
With their lovely big eyes.
The emptiness of sheds,
The rick stacked high.
The breast of the hills
Will soon turn grey
As the dogs that grieve
And I that fetched them in:
For the good gates are closed
In the yard down our way.
‘But my loss. My loss is deeper
Than Rosie’s of Chapel House Farm
For I met death before birth:
Fought for life and in reply lost
My own with a cold despair.
I hugged the fire around the hearth
To warm the beat and wing
Yet knew the symbol when it came
Lawrence had found the same.
I threw the starling hard as stone
Into the breaking earth
…’
Dead
as icebone breaking the hedge
Dead
as soil failing of good heart.
Dead
as trees quivering with shock
At the hot death from the plane.
O the salt loss of life
Her lovely green ways.
The emptiness of crib
And big stare of night.
The breast of the hills
Yield a bucket of milk:
But the crane no longer cries
With the round birds at dawn
For the home has been shadowed
A storm of sorrow drowned the way.
Here a perfect people set – on red rock,
White and grey as gull met
Pure to plough, each prince hamlet
Of slate strong as rate ticket.
Now one mouth twisting twelve tongues – of the flock
Unlocked the padlocked lungs:
Slung a trail of steaming dung
Blocking path of two not sung.
Stained virgin village with dearth – for the mock
Like strumpet jet, rocked mirth
And farmer: brought no more worth
Than winding sheet of sour berth.
When gossip kneads to grave crust, – with feared shock
Runs into fox of dust,
Then shall the two minds discussed
Remain bold with new sung trust.
I, in my dressing gown,
At the dressing table with mirror in hand
Suggest my lips with accustomed air, see
The reflected van like lipstick enter the village
When Laura came, and asked me if I knew.
We had known him a little, yet long enough:
Drinking in all rooms, mild and bitter,
Laughing and careless under the washing-line tree.
The day so icy when we gathered the moss,
The frame made from our own wire and cane;
Ivy in perfect scale, roped with fruit from the same root:
And from the Pen of Flowers those which had survived the frost.
We made the wreath standing on the white floor;
Bent each to our purpose wire to rose-wire;
Pinning each leaf smooth,
Polishing the outer edge with the warmth of our hands.
The circle finished and note thought out,
We carried the ring through the attentive eyes of the street:
Then slowly drove by Butcher’s Van to the ‘Union Hall’.
We walked the greaving room alone,
Saw him lying in his upholstered box,
Violet ribbon carefully crossed,
And about his sides bunches of wild thyme.
No one stirred as we offered the gift. No one drank there again.
The full field.
The stiff line of trees.
The antiseptic grass – dew shining.
The green,
Spraying from shorn hedgerows.
Sodium earth dug hard;
Bound by the fury of the earth’s lower crust.
Black bending cattle nose to the warmth.
Pebble sheep pant to a lighter tune.
To high air sustained.
To high springing air.
To blue-life-mist rising from the flaming earth.
On aconite shade and xerophyte fern
Dull sheep lie:
That heat ‘Lamb’s Ear’.
That heat farmer’s head.
That heat rick and roar,
Into a raging flame.
From innermost earth.
From fire underground.
From fire out of sight.
From rising fire in the sky
To Spring.
All glory,
And faith in mankind.
Spade jackets and tapping jackdaws on boles of wood,
Song of joy I sing.
Prim-pied under sky full of fresh livelihood,
Smile for eye of man.
Outhouses sweet with air stand whitened by the flood,
Of sun blanching spring.
In plate green meadows sheepdog and farmer brood,
On galvanised can.
Calling cattle from celandine and clover to mood,
Song of joy I sing.
In the cold when sea-mews flake the sky
With their curmurring fight for the eye
Of food on water blue, I think of snow.
I think alone.
I think of the sea its tall high waves
Of the eyes that it seeks, of the lives
That say the waves seek dead, it is not so
They are not dead.
For sea gives more than it takes and spreads
No stain of death on life of man, but treads
The dead for further flight, as sea-mews know,
As sea-mews go.
We must uprise O my people. Though
Secretly trenched in sorrel, we must
Upshine outshine the day’s sun: and day
Intensified by the falling prism
Of rain shall curve our smile with straw.
Bring plimsole plover to the tensile sand
And with cuprite crest and petulant feet
Distil our notes into febrile reeds
Crisply starched at the water-rail of tides.
On gault and greensand a gramophone stands:
In zebrine stripes strike out the pilotless
Age: from saxophone towns brass out the dead:
Disinter futility, that we entombing men
Might bridle our runaway hearts.
On tamarisk, on seafield pools shivering
With water-cats, ring out the square slate notes.
Shape the birdbox trees with neumes. Wind sound
Singular into cool and simple corners,
Round pale bittern grass, and all unseen
Unknown places of sheltered rubble
Where whimbrels, redshanks, sandpipers ripple
For the wing of living. Under tin of earth
And wooden boles where owls break music:
From this killing world against humanity,
Uprise against, outshine the day’s sun.
In elm no bird of jade
Shall creep with cold grey toes
For where I am when the spray
Of green sunlocks the bay
Married to song, mocks the day
In town no bird.
In town no bird alloy
Shall graze my heart’s shy grace,
For here at the lathe when the ring
Of steel threads the spring
For a chromium plane, I sing
In town no bird.
In town no bird, O greenscarlet
Fate on a white-eyed quest,
A black stave quavers the brain
Drills and derides the reign
Of shells with laughter’s bane,
In town no bird.
In town no bird, too late
To shrive with hot house tears,
For now with jazz in sky alone
Among the purr of metal wings
A coloured band resounds my grief
In town no bird.
A curlew hovers and haunts the room.
On bare boards creak its filleted feet:
For freedom intones four notes of doom,
Crept, slept, wept, kept
, under aerial gloom:
With Europe restless in hís wing beat,
A curlew hovers and haunts the room:
Fouls wire, pierces the upholstery bloom,
Strikes window pane with shagreen bleat,
Flicking scarlet tongue to a frenzied fume
Splints hís curved beak on square glass tomb:
Runs to and fro seeking mudsilt retreat;
Captured, explodes a chill sky croon
Wail-íng… pal-íng
… a desolate phantom
At the bath rim
purring burbling trilling soft sweet
Syllables of sinuous sound to a liquid moon
Till window, wide, frees thin mails of plume,
Fluting voice and shade through cloud���s moist sleet:
A curlew hovers and haunts the room.
That this, so common an event
In so deplorable a State
Should draw a wreath of joy
From our pale reeded hearts:
That she, without interference
Or compound political tags,
Can, so easily, paddle out
Her freshest brood of sleek black hens:
Stealing the water’s shine with elm-
Webbed stretch, the ribbons of sun
Winding around their necks:
Timely jerks purling through
Grisailles of rain – shocking the air
With scarlet bill and garter.
A bank rat sharpening his teeth
Might up on his haunches to listen:
A wise owl with rabbit ears
Could hardly frown at all this fuss.
Seagulls’ easy glide
Drifting fearlessly as voyagers’ tears:
Quay and ship move as imperceptively,
Without knowing we weep.
Cry gulls who recall
An ocean of uncertainty;
Greed of rowing men
Mere flies at the ship’s sides.
Last bargains roped and reached:
And as imperceptively regretted,
Tears of fury and stupidity
Reel down the runnels of those cheeks.
And the sea will insist
Persuade a path to follow,
Longs eagerly to cover
The green valley pastures:
To flow forward along
The sunken ribbed coomb
And dry river-bed… endlessly.
And it will succeed
Tomorrow follow
All gravel roads
And rise slowly around
The Dragon’s scaled Fort;
To leave nothing of Wales
But white island shining
The crest of Snowdon
Glittering with dark wintry-ice.
Find no woe in this:
For this is tomorrow.
And before tomorrow
England will be
For thousands of years
Lying below us
A submerged village
Like weeping Halkin;
When other and better banks
Dry from ocean beds,
Built of crystalline rock
And sharp shell and shale
Will arise for our freedom
For
our
feet to follow:
And this shall be always,
As it is never
.
So that magnetism pierces each blight
And shallow ring: sends a scaffold of light
Through suspended hills, drinks truculent sight
And water-silk of day, floating splashing
Eyelashes on about air, swilling
Swallows clean against Sunday, clearing
Breasts whiter than butterflies low over sill;
Who glazed this day? Fetched labourers to spill
About soil, spading like hairpins to till
Of earth. Who gently lifts a strawberry set,
Opens row to shine streamlets of violet sweat,
Sun concentrating on circlet of dust a banquet
Of warmth: tends garden twine unravelled on path,
Liquid gleam round each raceme of grass, an aftermath
That quavers like parakeet fresh out of its bath.
Who polished this day? String of mackerel and glue
Sized and scoured sky to its finest grain of blue:
Flashed motor spirit through each splint of wing: drew
And transfixed man at his most monstrous art of war:
Picked out world mildew and muddled indifference; saw
Heart, pressure of steel, culled into a shadowed claw
Sharpen infinity, and all trees of branched iron,
Leaves elliptical pinnate sprayed thinly over rinsed apron
Of space, their metallic hue so starkly crisp, enamel legion
Of the partial eclipse: darkening nature
Finding a ferret of lines in each feature:
Who clipped this white-eyed splendour? Barbed-wire-fixture.
Meat cover on slab of slate prosecuting inkstand
Cold basin and porcelain plate. Day’s bristol shine: a band
Of empty beer bottles, wine jars green for thirst. So reprimand
And commemorate, for this day will come again, war and day,
Imprisoning each other with shylock glint: betray
Clashing bayonets, hold up of sunny sideboard and pay.
Who ran with the sun sandpapered the way? You
Under arcade of bracelet blue: or was it the view
That clarified thursday, September nineteen forty-two.