Poems
A Tall Man Executes a Jig, 1963
I So the man spread his blanket on the field And watched the shafts of light between the tufts And felt the sun push the grass towards him; The noise he heard was that of whizzing flies, The whistlings of some small imprudent birds, And the ambiguous rumbles of cars That made him look up at the sky, aware Of the gnats that tilted against the wind And in the sunlight turned to jigging motes. Fruitflies he'd call them except there was no fruit About, spoiling to hatch these glitterings, These nervous dots for which the mind supplied The closing sentences from Thucydides, Or from Euclid having a savage nightmare. II Jig jig, jig jig. Like miniscule black links Of a chain played with by some playful Unapparent hand or the palpitant Summer haze bored with the hour's stillness. He felt the sting and tingle afterwards Of those leaving their unorthodox unrest, Leaving their undulant excitation To drop upon his sleeveless arm. The grass, Even the wildflowers become black hairs And himself a maddened speck among them. Still the assaults of the small flies made him Glad at last, until he saw purest joy In their frantic jiggings under a hair, So changed from those in the unrestraining air. III He stood up and felt himself enormous. Felt as might Donatello over stone, Or Plato, or as a man who has held A loved and lovely woman in his arms And feels his forehead touch the emptied sky Where all antinomies flood into light. Yet jig jig jig, the haloing black jots Meshed with the wheeling fire of the sun: Motion without meaning, disquietude Without sense or purpose, ephemerides That mottled the resting summer air till Gusts swept them from his sight like wisps of smoke. Yet they returned, bringing a bee who, seeing But a tall man, left him for a marigold. IV He doffed his aureole of gnats and moved Out of the field as the sun sank down, A dying god upon the blood-red hills. Ambition, pride, the ecstasy of sex, And all circumstances of delight and grief, That blood upon the mountain's side, that flood Washed into a clear incredible pool Below the ruddied peaks that pierced the sun. He stood still and waited. If ever The hour of revelation was come It was now, here on the transfigured steep. The sky darkened. Some birds chirped. Nothing else. He thought the dying god had gone to sleep: An Indian fakir on his mat of nails. V And on the summit of the asphalt road Which stretched towards the fiery town, the man Saw one hill raised like a hairy arm, dark With pines and cedars against the stricken sun --The arm of Moses or of Joshua. He dropped his head and let fall the halo Of mountains, purpling and silent as time, To see temptation coiled before his feet: A violated grass snake that lugged Its intestine like a small red valise. A cold-eyed skinflint it now was, and not The manifest of that joyful wisdom, The mirth and arrogant green flame of life; Or earth's vivid tongue that flicked in praise of earth. VI And the man wept because pity was useless. 'Your jig's up; the flies come like kites,' he said And watched the grass snake crawl towards the hedge, Convulsing and dragging into the dark The satchel filled with curses for the earth, For the odours of warm sedge, and the sun, A blood-red organ in the dying sky. Backwards it fell into a grassy ditch Exposing its underside, white as milk, And mocked by wisps of hay between its jaws; And then it stiffened to its final length. But though it opened its thin mouth to scream A last silent scream that shook the black sky, Adamant and fierce, the tall man did not curse. VII Beside the rigid snake the man stretched out In fellowship of death; he lay silent And stiff in the heavy grass with eyes shut, Inhaling the moist odours of the night Through which his mind tunnelled with flicking tongue Backwards to caves, mounds, and sunken ledges And desolate cliffs where come only kites, And where of perished badgers and racoons The claws alone remain, gripping the earth. Meanwhile the green snake crept upon the sky, Huge, his mailed coat glittering with stars that made The night bright, and blowing thin wreaths of cloud Athwart the moon; and as the weary man Stood up, coiled above his head, transforming all.