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Watch kept from dusk: shall the Redeemer come? Stood upon the sombre towers by beacons bright To pass along the signal swiftly, warnings sung By tongues of flame to lick the silent night With burning anguish, whipped to cry in pain Of torturous, half-forgotten truths, without remorse The sentries, under order, thoughtlessly obey And let the onward-rushing future sweep Ever faster, tumbling on its course, Uncontrolled and uncontrollable: rules Of such a game as Man has mind to play. Chequered, the darkened landscape, with blind jewels Stalwart of intent, yet cold and grey The watch-towers pinnacled upon the knolls Placed breadth and width across the land, Pinioned by fate, the bell-towers toll The passing hours whilst blank eyes stare And all else stilled but His great hand, Lowering gently, as a dawn-spun mist To cloak the stranger stealthily come Barefoot through quarries where the cracked rocks kissed Their lord in homage, thick-souled through tombèd Forests, whence he hewed him a host Of brave youth broom enough to kindle torches And feed the furnace of a thousand years past. Now, on the frontier, sharp command are spoken To break the calm sea, night, with sun-sped launches: Anticipation's secret fears confirmed; Into the waiting legions seeds of ripening doubt, Sewn deep as daggers, now as spears are turned Friend upon neighbour, for to cast the devil out Each of his reflection in such the mind doth see Itself. What harvest this! What pious words, Smote by the stallion breath they breed, Straightways dissolve into a blanket voice Which monotones the prophet curse: "The hills on which your towers stand are shifting sands; Your holy water, wild mares' milk; Your corn-fields are with stubble wracked and spanned Where farmers' eyes bleed fire; your silk And smooth-skinned women sack-cloth wear Impenitent; your children grin And, glossy-eyed, do shear their heads of hair. Snared by the lusty dance, all spin In e'er-engrossing circles, Lunatic, list around the lode, Altar of hell, towards thraldom topple Engulfed, and in their final throes Remorseless, laugh." Were Earth yet young, into this tale My soul might breath a thousand lives, Pour from my supper's sacred grail Venomous wit, with words contest Rime's tragic race, to bore chill tears Icily deep into their mother's breast. Stung by the strident serpent tongues Of peiste, chafing at constraint Into the heaving waves they would be gone, Time without trace by chains of glass Bound are we both, fragile fraternity, The still-born future and the stone-cold past. ... But I, the teller, weary, break my staff. Suffice to say the passing comes. At last. |
(1979) |
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photos: Stephen Alsford |
Created: November 17, 2014. Last modified: April 4, 2015 | © Stephen Alsford |