Authors: Martin Armstrong
And the bright bulwarks crusted o'er
With silver limpets from the floor
Of the drowned Earth. So Solomon,
Dreaming towards evening alone,
In the clear kingdom of his brain
Wrought that first temple without stain,
Too pure for stone or the rough grain
Of cedar or the dross of gold.
And Homer, blind and very old,
Along the wide plains of his thought
Saw battles and long sieges fought
Round ramparts rosy even as these.
So soared above the glooming trees
That tower of laughter and of tears
Where Beauty slept a hundred years.
And, built of sweetness and pure light,
So love and hope and heart's-delight
And all the lovely things of dream,
Hovering an instant on the stream
Of Man's ambitious spirit, glow
And vanish like an April snow.
Green grows the grass in these well-watered meadows
For here there bubbles from a hundred springs
The bright Clitumnus under dappled shadows
Of slender poplars where the faint breeze sings
And the green-showering tresses of weeping willows;
And all the pool is floored with woven weed
And caverns lined with glimmering mossy pillows
And pale blue rocks. Those bubbling waters feed
Rich farms, half-hidden behind a feathery screen
Of silver olive-boughs and trailing vines
Heavy with clusters purple, red, and green,
Soon to be trodden to red and golden wines.
And bounding either edge of the green plain,
The violet mountains lift their peaceful crowns,
Soaring like waves crest above crest again,
Still peopled by remote and ancient towns,â
Lofty Spoleto with its rocky gorge
Spanned by the aqueduct, and many a keep,
Spello and Montefalco, towns that urge
Stone street and scowling palace up the steep
And set a crown of towers on many hills,
Leaping abrupt and stark against the sky
And turbid at noon and eve with clanging bells.
From these and all the villages that lie
Scattered upon the plain, the countryfolk
Are flocking towards Foligno for the fair,
Bringing their goods. With song and curse and joke
They swelter along in the dry and dusty glare.
All day along the parched and dazzling roads
That straggle to the town from every part,
Oxen and mules and horses draw their loads
In wain and barrow and brightly painted cart.
While in the town all day, along the streets
And in that empty space within the walls
Edged with cool-shaded trees and long stone seats,
A crowd of busy folk are building stalls;
Till the place rings with hammering and knocking
And cracking whips and jangling harness-bells
And rumbling wheels of all the traffic flocking
In from the teeming plains and those blue hills.
Still with the growing crowd the din grows louder
With shouts of drivers, wagons turning, backing,
And stamping hooves that churn the dust to powder
And sweating men unloading and unpacking,
Spreading the wares in clusters on the grass
All duly planned like little towns with walls
And lanes and streets to let the buyers pass,
Or carefully disposed upon the stalls.
And carts and mules come pushing through the throng
Or scarlet wagon like a stranded hulk
That great white oxen slowly haul along
Heaving the yoke with all their noble bulk,
Patient, with branching horns and deep calm eyes
Like forest pools, and scarlet-tasselled brows.
Evening draws on; but ere the sunset dies
The bells in every tower and belfry rouse
A hum of clanging bronze that builds a dome
Of mellow noise above the din below,
So bright, it seems as if the shining foam
Of dust-motes and the golden evening glow
Were suddenly enchanted into sound.
But when both sound and light from the sky have faded
And colour has faded from all the hills around
And streets and squares are all grown cool and shaded,
Those weary folk make ready for the night.
Some with tarpaulin sheets build bivouacs
Or over the wide wagons stretch them tight
To form a hutch, or spread their rugs and sacks
Under the carts, while every tethered beast
With drooping head crops at the scanty grass.
Then, before rest, they spread the evening feast
Grouped about lamps and lanterns, and they pass
The wine-flask, the brown loaf and honeyed figs
And marbled mortadella and pale cheese.
Then someone tunes a fiddle and scratches jigs
Or softly from the darkness of the trees
Jingles a mandoline, so sad, so faint,
It sounds as though dead fingers touched the strings:
And laughter comes in gusts and through the quaint
Dark-huddled groups the yellow lamplight flings
Brightness across the corner of a shawl
Or fires a hand or gilds a laughing face
Or, touching hidden boughs, reveals a fall
Of emerald leaves with shadows frail as lace.
Then lamps go out and laughter dies and each
Creeps to his bed, and moonlight fills the square
And silence, broken by the lone owl's screech,
While all lie dreaming of to-morrow's fair
Till the delicious coolness of early dawning
Sharpens the air and all is fresh and gleaming,
And a chill fragrance steals beneath the awning
Of dewy boughs and stirs them from their dreaming.
Here on the blind verge of infinity
We live and move like moles. Our crumbling trench
Gapes like a long wound in the sodden clay.
The land is dead. No voice, no living thing,
No happy green of leaves tells that the spring
Wakes in the world behind us. Empty gloom
Fills the cold interspace of earth and sky.
The sky is waterlogged and the drenched earth
Rots, and the whining sorrow of slow shells
Flies overhead. But memory like the rose
Wakes and puts forth her bright and odorous blooms
And builds green hanging gardens in the heart.
Once, in another life in other places,
Where a slow river coiled through broad green spaces
And sunlight filled the long grass of the meadows
And moving water flashed from shine to shadows
Of old green-feathered willows, bent in ranks
    Along sun-speckled banks,â
Lovely remembered things now gone forever;
I saw young men run naked by the river,
Thirty young soldiers. Where the field-path goes,
Their boots and shirts and khaki lay in rows.
With feet among the long warm grass stood one
    Like ivory in the sun,
And in the water, white upon the shade
    That hung beneath the shore,
His long reflexion like a slow flag swayed
And at the trembling of the water frayed
Into a hundred shreds, then joined once more.
One, where the river, when the willows end,
Breaks from its calm to swirl about a bend,
Strong swimmer he, wrestled against the race
Of the full stream. I saw his laughing face
Framed by his upcurved arm. Another, slim,
Hands above head, stood braced upon the brim,
Then dived, a brother of the curved new moon,
    And came up streaming soon
Ten feet beyond, brown shoulders shining wet
And comic face and hair washed sleek as jet.
Out on the further bank another fellow
Climbed stealthily into a leaning willow
And perched leaf-shrouded, crooning like a dove;
Till from the pool below a voice was heard:
“'Ere, Bert! Where's Bert?” and Bert sang out above:
“Up 'ere, old son, changed to a bloody bird!”
And dived through leaves and shattered through the cool
Clear watery mirror, and all across the pool
Slow winking circles opened wide, till he
Rose and in rising broke their symmetry.
Laughter and shouting filled the sparkling air.
Bright flakes of scattered water everywhere
Leapt from their diving. Hosts of little billows
Beat the shores, and the hanging boughs of willows
Glittered with glassy drops. Then, bright as fire,
A bugle sounded, and their happy din
Stopped, and the boys, with that swift discipline
By which keen life answers the soul's desire,
Rushed for the bank. And soon the bank was bright
With bodies swarming up out of the stream.
From the water and the boughs they came in sight:
Across the leaves I saw their quick limbs gleam.
Then brandished towels flashed whitely here and there.
They dried their ears and scrubbed their towzled hair.
One, stepping to the water, carefully
Stretched a bare leg to rinse a muddy foot:
    One sat with updrawn knee,
Bent head, and both hands tugging on a boot.
And gradually the bright and flashing crowd
Dimmed into sober khaki. Then the loud
Laughter and shouts and songs died at a word.
The ranks fell in: no sound, no movement stirred.
The willow-boughs were still: the blue sky burned:
The party numbered down, formed fours, right turned,
Marched. And their shadows faded from the stream
And the dark pool swayed back into its dream:
Only the trodden meadow-grass reported
Where all that gay humanity had sported.
So the dream fades. I wake, remembering how
Many of those smart boys no longer now
Cast running shadows on the grass or make
    White tents with laughter shake,
But lie in narrow chambers underground,
Eyes void of sunlight, ears unthrilled by sound
Of laughter. Round my post on every hand
Stretches this grim, charred skeleton of land
Where ruined homes and shell-ploughed fields are lost
In one great sea of clay, clay seared by fire,
Battered by rainstorms, jagged and scarred and crossed
By gaping trench-lines hedged with rusted wire.
The rainy evening fades. A rainy night
Sags down upon us. Wastes of sodden clay
Fade into mist, and fade all sound and sight,
All broken sounds and movements of the day,
To emptiness and listlessness, a grey
Unhappy silence tremulous with the poise
Of hearts intent with fearful expectation
    And secret preparation,
Silence that is not peace but bated breath,
    A listening for death,
    The quivering prelude to tremendous noise.
O give us one more day of sun and leaves,
The laughing soldiers and the laughing stream,
And when at dawn the loud destruction cleaves
The silence, and (like men that walk in dream,
Knowing the stern ordeal has begun)
We climb the trench and cross the wire and start,
We'll stumble through the shell-bursts with good heart
Like boys who race through meadows in the sun.
When on the sluggish tide of time
The immortal moment comes
Whose bugle-summons cleaves with gleaming edge
Flesh and all stuff of the material world,
The soldier-soul, with that swift discipline
Wherewith keen life answers the heart's desire,
Leaps on the deed as tiger leaps on fawn,
As powder answers fire.
Soul is the perfect athlete running free
Among the clear winds of reality;
For whom dim speculation and the thought
That measured, weighed, and sought
In worlds unreal the cloudy paradises
And comfortable prizes
For loveless rules obeyed, are less than nought.
The eternal moment being his vital air,
He cannot ask nor care
Whether his burning deed shall sow the seeds
Of other life and deeds,
Or if his being, ardent, pure, intact,
Die on the summit of the immortal act.
Mournful and clear and golden on the dusk
The sudden fire of bugles. Fervid flights
Of burning wings flash up from the dark hill
Where like a growth of giant lilies glow
The lighted tents. That piercing music rouses
The slumbrous memory. Forests of the past
Answer those fervid notes with fainter notes
Sepulchral, far, whose clear reveille shakes
The dark unfretted waters of the mind
Till all the surface quivers with keen pain
And depth to depth the searching trouble stirs
Till all that watery world
Thrills with new life that urges to the top
Layers of dim memory hidden long from light,
And years long dead, victories, endurances,
And terrible happenings live again. Again
In rainswept darkness down the broken roads
The drenched and sweating troops swarm towards the line,
Stumbling with burdened backs and burdened hearts
Into their new ordeal: on and on
Through tunnels of the blind and timeless night,
By wallowing lorries thrust into the ditch
And pulsing tractors hauling monstrous guns,
Or in cold rain interminably impeded
By some unknown obstruction miles ahead:
Through fields that stink of carnage, yawn with holes
Full of pale stagnant water; thicket-snares
Of sharp-fanged wire, through roar of murderous shells
And gas and blood and flame, till the shocked mind
Flares up in terror and the memory dies