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    Dylan Thomas: I Make This In A Warring Absence

    Dylan Thomas
    (1914 – 1953)

    I Make This In A Warring Absence

    I make this in a warring absence when
    Each ancient, stone-necked minute of love’s season
    Harbours my anchored tongue, slips the quaystone,
    When, praise is blessed, her pride in mast and fountain
    Sailed and set dazzling by the handshaped ocean,
    In that proud sailing tree with branches driven
    Through the last vault and vegetable groyne,
    And this weak house to marrow-columned heaven,

    Is corner-cast, breath’s rag, scrawled weed, a vain
    And opium head, crow stalk, puffed, cut, and blown,
    Or like the tide-looped breastknot reefed again
    Or rent ancestrally the roped sea-hymen,
    And, pride is last, is like a child alone
    By magnet winds to her blind mother drawn,
    Bread and milk mansion in a toothless town.

    She makes for me a nettle’s innocence
    And a silk pigeon’s guilt in her proud absence,
    In the molested rocks the shell of virgins,
    The frank, closed pearl, the sea-girls’ lineaments
    Glint in the staved and siren-printed caverns,
    Is maiden in the shameful oak, omens
    Whalebed and bulldance, the gold bush of lions,
    Proud as a sucked stone and huge as sandgrains.

    These are her contraries: the beast who follows
    With priest’s grave foot and hand of five assassins
    Her molten flight up cinder-nesting columns,
    Calls the starved fire herd, is cast in ice,
    Lost in a limp-treed and uneating silence,
    Who scales a hailing hill in her cold flintsteps
    Falls on a ring of summers and locked noons.

    I make a weapon of an ass’s skeleton
    And walk the warring sands by the dead town.
    Cudgel great air, wreck east, and topple sundown,
    Storm her sped heart, hang with beheaded veins
    Its wringing shell, and let her eyelids fasten.
    Destruction, picked by birds, brays through the jaw-bone,

    And, for that murder’s sake, dark with contagion
    Like an approaching wave I sprawl to ruin.
    Ruin, the room of errors, one rood dropped
    Down the stacked sea and water-pillared shade,
    Weighed in rock shroud, is my proud pyramid;
    Where, wound in emerald linen and sharp wind,
    The hero’s head lies scraped of every legend,
    Comes love’s anatomist with sun-gloved hand
    Who picks the live heart on a diamond.

    ‘His mother’s womb had a tongue that lapped up mud,’
    Cried the topless, inchtaped lips from hank and hood
    In that bright anchorground where I lay linened,
    ‘A lizard darting with black venom’s thread
    Doubled, to fork him back, through the lockjaw bed
    And the breath-white, curtained mouth of seed.’
    ‘See,’ drummed the taut masks, ‘how the dead ascend:
    In the groin’s endless coil a man is tangled.’

    These once-blind eyes have breathed a wind of visions,
    The cauldron’s root through this once-rindless hand
    Fumed like a tree, and tossed a burning bird;
    With loud, torn tooth and tail and cobweb drum
    The crumpled packs fled past this ghost in bloom,
    And, mild as pardon from a cloud of pride,
    The terrible world my brother bares his skin.

    Now in the cloud’s big breast lie quiet countries,
    Delivered seas my love from her proud place
    Walks with no wound, nor lightning in her face,
    A calm wind blows that raised the trees like hair
    Once where the soft snow’s blood was turned to ice.
    And though my love pulls the pale, nippled air,
    Prides of to-morrow suckling in her eyes,
    Yet this I make in a forgiving presence.

    Dylan Thomas poetry
    kempis poetry magazine

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