Lover’s flower
What’s the lover’s favourite flower?
Spiky gorse, adorned with many
golden blossoms, ten-a-penny,
every month and every hour.
What’s the reason? Love’s in season
when the gorse comes into flower:
every month and every hour.
Bluebell Wood
Between the oaks and through the briars
and underneath the sycamores
the bluebells run like spirit fires,
inflaming on the leafy floors;
besetting lovers, hotly yearning,
lying where the fire is burning.
Burning!
Burning, burning all aflame
with a fire they cannot tame.
The nettles grow near Bluebell Wood
and rafters rot beside a wall
where other lovers came and stood
their names and faces past recall;
where busy moles and worms interning,
leaves and mould to nettles turning;
turning, turning fallen petals,
unremembered, turn to nettles.
It’s time that damps the lovers’ flame,
impatient time that cannot stay
to learn a solitary name
but lets all passing pass away.
Blinkered time! But love is ranging
ever further, ever changing.
Changing, changing as we lie,
changing into love gone by.
A day remembered
Where lady ferns and snakes unfold
and buttercups in glossy gilt
outshine the gorseflower’s yellow gold
my spunky youth was freely spilt
and there our lusty lungs were filled
with philtres from the lake distilled,
that day;
when came that way and nothing loath,
a boy and girl, two virgins both.
Sang all that day the loud cuckoo,
the nosy neighbour’s chief of spies,
but all the world was wooing too
and had no time for prying eyes;
for all had better things to do
than listen to the fool cuckoo.
My oath,
they did come both, both girl and boy
and nothing loath nor were they coy.
Though love is ever prone to stray,
not bothering to tell us why,
we cannot love like yesterday
and cannot gain from love passed by.
Yet love’s no fly with painted wings,
a prey to any bird that sings,
nor toy,
nor wanton joy but boy! Oh! Boy!
We came that day and were not coy.
The lovely, long-remembered day
dies with a poppy-coloured sun
‘We’ll not forget’ the lovers say
‘and never, never will be done’
but time untwists the lovers’ knot
and beckons to a loamy spot
them both
nor are they loath for time has run
and time must end what love’s begun.
Nocturne
Do you remember, white, white maid
how pretty was the couch we laid?
Oh! Call it heather, call it ling,
bare on the naked heath we’d cling,
close to the very noon of night,
the summer moon in roundest light
atop the trees while we, beneath,
in shadows black upon the heath
like silver trout in some dark pool
each took the other one to school.
The summer moon, her face all red
from watching us, lit up our bed;
a friend who never hid her face
nor gave away our hiding place.
Bon appetite
If love’s your table set for one
your feast cannot have long to run;
a selfish hunger will be small
bon appetite to lovers all.
Love is a banquet made for two
so let us quaff each other’s wine;
I’m greedy for your heady brew;
you sparkle like champagne for mine.
There is no vintage to excel
the potent waters of your well
and since you taste it you must know
how sweet the blossom that I grow.
J.
You burn before me like a golden fleece
where seaborne sequins sparkle in the sun,
beyond a whirlpool churning without cease,
across a gulf where fearful currents run.
A wiser, kinder god I would invoke
but fierce young Eros comes to visit me,
about him, darkly wrapped, his purple cloak
to throw upon the separating sea.
He weaves bewitching yarns but evermore
tranquillity departs at his approach:
I seem to see you on a distant shore,
a golden fleece pinned with a golden brooch,
where cedar-scented breezes seek the sea
and fatten sails that sail away from me.
Cleopatra
I once knew Cleopatra;
I let her sail away
upon her barque from Actium
to live another day.
Witch eyes and wishful longing,
the purple sails and plain,
that carried us to Actium
can’t bear us up again.
I once knew Cleopatra;
there’s poison in the truth:
I let her go at Actium
to find a serpent’s tooth.
The end of the affair
Those late reflections in your eyes,
those lilies of the moon, those green
dye-wringed silks, those emeralds tell
the truth too clear, too plainly and too well.
Hang in the wind and spill your colours out
you alien banners of unpleasant truth:
there is no love to hold you close to me.
Let oceans burn away and heaven’s flame
consume the earth: the thing remains the same
Now and then
How I would sling a rifle!
And swing like a hussar!
And earn a husband’s hatred! Ho! Hurrah!
The ladies that I feted
now seem to be outdated
so I’m singing for a trifle
to a lonely, black guitar.
Throwing crockery
My daughter has just thrown a plate
at her mate.
So! The old custom survives
among wives.
Her maternal grandad, now late,
hurled a plate
at her gran
and my dad, also dead,
ducked his head
for his life just as much
from his wife
as the hun (of ’41).
In a stew
I once threw, being studious
and moody-ous:
Acta Crystallographica, 1987, part 2
at my wife
who is perfect but never gives up
and annoyed with me once became
so untame
as to hit me with tea
in a cup.
When all’s said:
marriage is made in bed
but unstable
at table.
Temptation on the river
Myself and Eve are dressed for summer,
like the willows by the river;
softly on the satin pillows of the water gently slipping;
idle blades in Isis dipping;
traffic like a distant drummer…
Look! Here comes a swimming snake!
On the water, barely in it,
serpent eyes of Eden glinting, green enamelled, surface dinting,
there he lies for just a minute,
on the shiny wetness resting, head on paddle, fork tongue testing;
spirit of the poison chalice, innocent of any malice.
Round his noble neck is rolled the ancient torque in leaf of gold,
freshly fashioned by a master, delicate as alabaster,
emerald scales and, thin as whips, turquoise inlaid on his lips;
that tempt my Eve?
Not so, it errs to think that his could tempt like hers
but now he swims away in haste. Farewell, we’ve other fruit to taste.
Winter rondeau
Him O let us go! For summer seems
already come and golden beams
warm leafless banks although they’re bare;
wild honey seems to scent the air
and ghostly mayflies haunt the streams.
Her I catch your words and eye which gleams
and tells me that it ill beseems
and yet the sunny banks are fair.
O let us go!
Him We have surpassed the wanton themes
that jealous muses bring to dreams
with ravishments beyond compare.
Her But now I am in disrepair
and O how cold the weather seems
O let us go!
Mistress. Winter’s jump
(A lyric for John Dowland’s ‘Mrs. Winter’s Jump’)
Over the stile, the sticks and the stumps
young Mistress Winter goes over the jumps;
clearing the ditches, water and dry,
shot from a longbow and feathered to fly.
Follow the hound that follows the deer;
jump every fence and swallow your fear,
up on a horse that is bred from the blood
with a clatter, scatter, spatter of mud!
Over the fence at desperate pace!
Fie to the fox! It’s Winter I chase;
I’ll catch her yet if I get a good start
but she up, away, away with my heart.
The day the world changed
‘Today the world changed;
it has happened before.
There were things rearranged
but nothing estranged
from the end prearranged
by the natural law.
Today the world changed,
it has happened before.’
‘Then our love was exchanged
by some natural law!
I am much disarranged
that so far have we ranged
that today the world changed
and you cannot say more
than our love was exchanged
by some natural law!’
‘My guns are outranged
I can argue no more.
O let me be manged
devoured or deranged
if ever I’m changed;
it is you I adore.
My guns are outranged
I can argue no more.’
Faces in a crowd
From face to face my glances fly,
among a thousand, all unique,
yet every one the same:
mere wooden faces passing by
on lonely dolls that cannot speak
and gnomes without a name.
Your face alone delights my eye
and promises the cure I seek
for aches I cannot tame.
I wait in fever; wonder why
this helpless yearning leaves me weak
and why you are to blame.
At last you come. My mouth is dry;
I tremble; I can hardly speak;
you clasp me like a flame.
I'll burn forever. As I die
I shall remember, cheek-to-cheek,
how you were mine to claim.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
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