Saturday, October 12, 2013
Cheerful Thoughts from Enoch Powell
Enoch Powell (1912-1998), First Poems: Fifty Short Lyrics (Oxford: Shakespeare Head Press, 1937), XXXVIII:
Nick Sinclair, Enoch Powell
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The sky is white from east to west,Id., XL:
And bright the day will break;
It lies to me that life is best,
And hearing I awake.
And so from east to west the sky
Will whiten as before
And lie again the selfsame lie,
The day I wake no more.
The lights are growing in the west,Id., XLVII:
Nor yet the east is black;
The sun goes slower down to rest
And brings the summer back.
I hate the growing light of spring,
I hate the lingering sun,
I hate the sights that only bring
Regret for summers done.
Day in, day out, the sunset sky
Renews the grinding pain
Of springs and summers gone that I
Can never live again;
And when the sun below the sea
The clouds with crimson dyes,
I shrink and turn; for there I see
My life that bleeding lies.
Oh sweet it is to see the skyId., XLVIII:
Behind the yellow gorse,
And sweet it is to hear the cry
Of swallows in their course,
And sweet upon the windy lea
To shout and leap and run;
But this were sweeter far to me,
Neither to feel nor move nor be
Nor ever see the sun.
Sharp rises on the cloudless blueI knew that Powell was a classical scholar and politician, but not that he wrote poetry. Despite (or perhaps because of) their lugubrious tone, these poems in the spirit of Housman appeal to me. I haven't seen Powell's First Poems, or his Collected Poems (London: Bellew, 1990) either. The texts above are taken from an apparently defunct blog, England Expects.
The knife-edge of the hills,
And boundless sunlight clear and true
The vale beneath them fills.
As clear as light, sharp as a knife
A truth springs in my breast:
There are but two things, death and life,
And death of these is best.