All – is a

whiteness. (My spirit is one

uninterrupted wound.) The chalk of

details must    belong to tailors!

The dome of heaven was    built in a single frame

and oceans    are featureless    a mass of

drops that cannot be distinguished. You

are unique. And love is no detective.

Let now some neighbour say whether your

hair is black or fair, for he can tell.

I leave that to physicians or watchmakers.

What passion has a use for such details?

You are a full, unbroken circle, a

whirlwind or    wholly turned to stone.

I cannot think of you apart from

love. There is an    equals sign.

(In heaps of sleepy down, and falls of

water, hills of foam, there is

a new sound, strange to my hearing,

instead of I    a regal we)

and though life’s beggared now and

narrowed into    how things are

still I cannot see you joined to

anyone: a

              revenge of memory.

finished 1 December 1924 

POEM OF THE END

1

A single post, a point of rusting

     tin in the sky

marks the fated place we

     move to, he and I

on time    as death is

     prompt strangely

too smooth the gesture of

     his hat to me

menace at the edges of his

     eyes    his mouth tight

shut    strangely too low is the

     bow he makes tonight

on time?    that false note in

     his voice, what

is it the brain alerts to and the

     heart drops at?

under that evil sky, that sign of

     tin and rust,

Six o’clock. There he is waiting

     by the post.

Now we kiss soundlessly, his

     lips stiff as

hands are given to queens, or

     dead people thus

round us the shoving elbows of

     ordinary bustle

and strangely irksome rises the

     screech of a whistle

howls like a dog screaming

     angrier, longer: what

a nightmare strangeness life is

     at death point

and that nightmare reached my waist

     only last night

and now reaches the stars, it has

     grown to its true height

crying silently love love until

     – Has it gone

six, shall we go to the cinema?

     I shout it: home!

2

And what have we come to?

     tents of nomads

thunder and drawn swords over

     our heads, some

terror we expect

     listen    houses

collapsing in the one

     word: home.

It is    the whine of a cossetted

     child lost, it is the

noise a baby makes for

     give and mine.

Brother in dissipation, cause

     of this cold fever, you

hurry now to get home just

     as men rush in leaving

like a horse jerking the

     line    rope down in the dust.

Is there even a building there?

     Ten steps before us.

A house on the hill    no higher a

     house on the top of the hill and

a window under the roof    is it

     from the red sun alone

it is burning?    or is it my life

     which must begin again? how

simple poems are: it means I

     must go out into the night

                                          and talk to

who shall I tell my sorrow

     my horror greener than ice?

– You’ve been thinking too much.

     A solemn answer: yes.

3

And the embankment    I hold

     to water    thick and solid as

if we had come to the hanging

     gardens of Semiramis

 

to water    a strip as colourless

     as a slab for corpses

I am like a female singer holding

     to her music. To this wall.

 

Blindly    for you won’t return

     or listen, even if I bend to

the quencher of all thirst, I am

hanging at the gutter of a roof.

Lunatic. It is not the river

     (I was born naiad) that makes me

shiver now, she was a hand I held

     to, when you walked beside me, a lover

and faithful.

                       The dead are faithful

though not to all in their cells; if

     death lies on my left now,

it is at your side I feel it.

Now a shaft of astonishing light, and

     laughter    that cheap tambourine.

– You and I must    have a talk. And

     I shiver: let’s be brave, shall we?

4

A blonde mist, a wave of

gauze ruffles, of human

breathing, smoky exhalations

endless talk    the smell of

what? of haste and filth

connivance    shabby acts all

the secrets of business men

     and ballroom powder. 

Family men    like bachelors

move in their rings like middle-aged boys

always joking    always laughing, and

calculating, always calculating

large deals    and little ones, they are

snout-deep in the feathers of some

business arrangement

     and ballroom powder.

(I am half-turned away    is this

our house? I am not mistress here)

Someone    over his cheque book

another bends to a kid glove

a third works at a delicate foot

in patent leather    furtively    the smell

rises of marriage-broking

     and ballroom powder.

In the window is the silver

bite of a tooth: it is the Star of Malta,

which is the sign of stroking, of the love

that leads to pawing and to pinching.

(Yesterday’s food perhaps    but

nobody worries if it smells slightly)

     of dirt, commercial tricks

          and ballroom powder.

The chain is too short perhaps even

if it is not steel but platinum?

Look how their three chins shake

like cows munching their own veal

above their sugared necks

the devils swing on a gas lamp

     smelling of business slumps

and another powder

made by Berthold Schwartz

                                       genius

intercessor for people:

– You and I must    have a talk

– Let’s be brave, shall we?

5

I catch a movement of his

     lips, but he won’t

speak – You don’t    love me?

     – Yes, but in torment

drained and driven to death

     (He looks round like an eagle)

– You call this    home? That’s

     in the heart. – What literature!

Love is flesh, it is a

     flower flooded with blood.

Did you think it was just a

     little chat across a table

a snatched hour and back home again

     the way gentlemen and ladies

play at it? Either love is…

– A shrine?

                                – or else a scar.

A scar    every servant and guest

     can see (and I think silently:

love is a bow-string pulled

     back to the point of breaking).

Love is a bond. That has snapped for

     us    our mouths and lives part

(I begged you not to put a

     spell on me that holy hour

close on mountain heights of

     passion    memory is mist).

Yes, love is a matter of gifts

     thrown in the fire, for nothing

The shellfish crack of his mouth

     is pale, no chance of a smile:

– Love is a large    bed.

     – Or else an empty gulf.

Now his fingers begin to

     beat, no mountains

move. Love is –

                     – Mine: yes.             

I understand. And so?

The drum beat of his fingers

     grows (scaffold and square)

– Let’s go, he says. For me, let’s

     die, would be easier.

Enough cheap stuff    rhymes

     like railway hotel rooms, so:

– love means life    although

     the ancients had a different

name.

     – Well?

               – A scrap

     of handkerchief in a fist

like a fish. – Shall we go? – How,

     bullet    rail    poison

death anyway, choose! I make no

     plans. A Roman, you

survey the men still alive

     like an eagle:

                       Let’s say goodbye.

6

I didn’t want this, not

     this (but listen, quietly,

to want is what bodies do

     and now we are ghosts only).

And yet I    didn’t say it

     though the time of the train is set

and the sorrowful honour of leaving

     is a cup given to women

or perhaps in madness I

     misheard you    polite liar:

is this the bouquet that you give your

     love, this blood-stained honour?

Is it? Sound follows

     sound clearly: was it goodbye

you said? (as sweetly casual

     as a handkerchief dropped without

thought) in this battle

     you are Caesar (What an

insolent thrust, to put the

     weapon of defeat, into my hand

like a trophy). It continues. To

     sound in my ears. As I bow.

– Do you always pretend

     to be forestalled in breaking?

Don’t deny this, it

     is a vengeance of Lovelace,

a gesture that does you credit

     while it lifts the flesh

from my bones. Laughter    the laugh of

     death. Moving. Without desire.

That is for others now

     we are shadows to one another.

Hammer the last nail in

     screw up the lead coffin.

– And now a last request.

     – Of course. – Then say nothing

about us    to those who will

     come after me. (The sick

on their stretchers talk of spring.)

– May I ask the same thing?

– Perhaps I should give you a ring?

     – No. Your look is no longer open.

The stamp left on your heart

     would be the ring on your hand

So now    without any scenes

     I must swallow, silently, furtively.

– A book then? – No, you give those

to everyone, don’t even write them

books…

So now    must    be no

so now    must    be no

must be no crying

In wandering tribes of

fishermen brothers

drink without crying

dance without crying

their blood is hot, they

pay without crying

pearls in a glass

melt, as they run their

world    without crying

                         Now I am going and this

                         Harlequin gives his

                         Pierrette a bone like

                         a piece of contempt

                         He throws her the honour

                         of ending the curtain, the last

                         word when one inch of lead in

                         the breast would be hotter and better

Cleaner. My    teeth

press my lips. I can

stop myself crying

pressing the sharpness

into the softest

so without crying

so tribes of nomads

die without crying

burn without crying.

So tribes of fishermen

in ash and song can

hide their dead man.

7

And the embankment. The last one.

     Finished. Separate, and hands apart

like neighbours avoiding one another. We

     walk away from the river, from my

cries.