Gaudete (3 page)

Read Gaudete Online

Authors: Ted Hughes

Has turned back from the drive gate.

A leaf-bordered blankness

Like the suck of a precipice

Draws her along the bleak sweep of drive

Towards the white house.

Her legs move, as if to remain still were even more futile.

She looks upward

Into the open hanging underbellies of the trees

As if those puzzles held something from her.

As she walks

She feels too present, too tall, too vivid.

The level sprawl of world

Draws away tinily, in every direction.

It separates itself from her exposure.

She looks down

At the chaotic gravel.

Her eyes claw at the gravel.

Something in her is preparing a scream, which she dare

                                                                      not utter.

Her legs carry her towards the house.

Twitchings jerk her eyelid, her cheek,

A tugging tightens her brow, so she has to rub her face in

                                                                    her hands.

Something overpowering

Like an unmanageable horse, a sudden wild bulk

Starts rearing and wheeling away, to one side then to the

                                                                           other

As if it would break out of her.

She halts, balancing giddily.

She has closed her eyes

Where Lumb is still with her

His presence strays all over her body, like a flame on oil,

His after-nearness, the after-caress of his voice

As if she breathed inside the silk of his nearness.

At the drive’s edge, she kneels among bluebells.

She shuts her eyes more tightly.

The bunching beast-cry inside her shudders to be let out.

She folds her arms tightly

Over this rending,

She bends low, her face closes more tightly.

Her moan barely reaches the nearest tree.

She is gouging the leaf-mould,

She is anointing her face with it.

She wants to rub her whole body with it.

She is wringing the bunched stems of squeaking spermy

                                                                        bluebells

And anointing her face.

Lumb’s glance keeps glimpsing through her body

Churning tracks of soft phosphorescence

Like the first sweaty wafts of a sickness.

She wants to press her face into the soil, into the moist

                                                                         mould,

And scream straight downward, into earth-stone darkness.

She cannot get far enough down, or near enough.

She hauls herself to her feet, towering

And walks

And enters the still house.

Rooms retreat.

A march of right angles. Barren perspectives

Cluttered with artefacts, in a cold shine.

Icebergs of taste, spacing and repose.

The rooms circle her slowly, like a malevolence.

She feels weirdly oppressed.

She remembers

A shadow-cleft redstone desert

At evening.

The carpet’s edge. The parquet.

The door-knob’s cut glass.

She observes these with new fear.

The kitchen’s magenta tiles. The blue Aga.

It is her fifteen years of marriage

Watching her, strange-faced, like a jury.

Coffee from silver, to disarm some minutes.

Leaning against the bar of the stove

She meditates blankly,

Fixedly.

She is like the eye of a spirit level

Intent

On earth’s poles, the sun’s pull, the moon’s imbalance.

A charioteer, for these moments,

On some rocking perimeter.

Major Hagen irrupts quietly into this sphere.

Controlling the explosive china with watchmender’s touch,

                                                      he too drinks coffee.

He advances remotely, fumbling with keyhole words.

Suddenly he meets her small steady pupil

And sees her dry tangle of hair

And an outrage too dazzling to look at ignites the whole

                                   tree of his nerves, a conflagration

Takes hold of everything –

His words seem to scald and corrupt his lips.

An insane voltage, a blue crackling entity

Is leaping around the kitchen

As if it had crashed in through the window.

Pauline Hagen feels her face go numb.

She stares at the black labrador

Which is enlarging, goggling, bristling

And snarling gape-mouthed.

Invisible hands

Are prising its jaws apart.

Hagen’s face-crust has crimsoned. He is yelling.

An avalanche is on the move.

It will have to come.

There is so much he must not fail.

Humiliation of Empire, a heraldic obligation

Must have its far-booming say.

Three parts incomprehensible.

A frenzy of obsolete guns

Is banging itself to tatters

And an Abbey of Banners yells like an exhausted

                                                              schoolmaster.

Arsenals of crazier energy open.

Depth charges

Of incredulity and righteousness

Search the taciturn walls and furniture.

Finally he just stands, gripping her shoulders,

Blasting her from all sides with voice.

She has shrivelled small, regaining her distance,

Trying to balance her coffee.

The labrador is spinning in a tight circle.

She sees the foam at its jaws.

And glances at Hagen – her half-anxiety

Outstripped by a quick smile, a flash of malice –

And the dog attacks him.

Its fangs hook in the weave of his jacket.

He flings it from him, barking its name, astonished.

It returns and clamps solidly on to the meat of his thigh.

He feels the shock of its hostility deeper than its fangs.

He kicks it away.

He bellows to overawe it.

It comes back

And leaps and leaps at his face.

Now Hagen

Swerves the full momentum of his rage on to the dog.

He lifts a chair.

This dog is going to account for everything.

Fangs splinter wood and wood shatters.

Only exhaustion will stop him.

Till at last he stands, trembling,

Like somebody pulled from an accident.

He drops the broken stump of his weapon.

He kneels

Beside the stilled heap of loyal pet

Hands huge with baffled gentleness

As if he had just failed to save it.

He lifts its slack head.

His horror is as dry

As volcanic rock.

His wife is watching him

As if it were all something behind the nearly unbreakable

                                             screen glass of a television

With the sound turned off.

Lumb’s voice

Is stroking her deeply,

Touching at her heart and lungs and bowels glancingly.

She goes on sipping her coffee.

The tall woodland rains echo,

A descending hush of roar.

And the Minister’s blue Austin van slides to a stop

Behind the white Ford.

Garten sinks to his knees

As if under the intensification of joy.

His lips

Surprisingly full red in the thin-skinned face

Filter crooked enlightenment.

The Reverend Lumb’s long figure

Has emerged. Brisk

Under the muscled, sooted boles and silvery torsos of the

                                                        uptwisting beeches

He appears tiny.

The long cassocked back

Is bending

At the Ford’s suddenly open door.

He is leaning right inside.

Garten

Rises above the napes of tender curled bracken

As if clearing an aim

And he sees

The Minister’s feet sprawling.

Lumb

Is fighting inside the car.

His hand

Claws for a grip on the car-top.

Suddenly he comes out backwards

As if tearing free

And the Ford roars out, its tyres rip dirt, it climbs

Away up through the tree tunnel of the opposite slope

In a burrowing fury.

Garten is erect, in open view, astounded – as if his rabbiting spade had spilled open a cache of ancient gold.

The Minister stands in the road

Mopping at his mouth. His white handkerchief

Brings away blood.

He and Garten inspect it thoughtfully

In the wood’s

Torn, healing stillness.

Arriving home, has left the car-door wide, and run straight into the house, leaving that door wide too, right back to the wall, as if she meant to snatch up just the few essential things and leave this place forever –
 

She has already paused.

She stands

In the cool gleaming steel and copper stillness

Of her kitchen.

Stares at the bead on the cold water tap

Letting the scorchings sweep her throat and face.

She jerks back into control – hurries

From room to room, tense with purpose

Seeing nothing and arguing with everything.

All over her body the nerves of her skin smoulder.

The cream suit is an agony.

A lump of boiling electricity swells under her chest.

Wild cravings twist through her

To plunge to the floor

As if into a winter sea

And scour her whole body’s length with writhings.

Sweat prickles her brow, she exclaims at the mirrors.

Her interrogation of Lumb is rearranging itself inside her. A shifting of ponderous, underground machinery. A dragging and swaying of unmanageable stage-partitions.
 

For long minutes, vacant,

She watches through a window, hardly breathing,

Mesmerised

By a distant conifer.

She is moving again, as if it were a last search for something hopelessly lost. Mirrors turn her back. A hateful orange vase, a souvenir ashtray, present themselves briefly.
She finds herself now in one room, now in another, with a sensation of dropping through papery floors, falling from world to world.
 

As if hours had passed

She is sitting at a walnut veneer table.    

She tilts her watch. As if in a doctor’s waiting room. She has lit her last cigarette. Chill, comfortless, alien furniture. She is thinking: none of this has anything to do with me, and soon I shall be free.

She stares towards her husband’s medical reference library, to numb herself on its dull morocco. It is no escape. Those volumes are swollen with the details of Lumb’s body. Her brain swoons a little, trying to disengage. The glistening tissues, the sweating gasping life of division and multiplication, the shoving baby urgency of cells. All her pores want to weep. She is gripped by the weird pathos of biochemistry, the hot silken frailties, the giant, gristled power, the archaic sea-fruit inside her, which her girdle bites into, which begins to make her suit too tight.

She feels the finality of it all, and the nearness and greatness of death. Sea-burned, sandy cartilege, draughty stars, gull-cries from beyond the world’s edge. She feels the moment of killing herself grow sweet and ripe, close and perfect.
 

The walls wait. The senseless picture frame.

Eyes half-closed

She sits stupidly, like something cancelled. Forcing the

                                                            seconds to pass.

Once, but more weakly and fleetingly than ever before, she imagines escaping to her sister in Reading. Her mother in Winchester. Rapidly she glances through the unbuttoning of coats, the worn-out exclamations, the glitter of curiosity, the celebration of tea and biscuits. Her drained,
cold fingers remain spread on the walnut veneer, above their dim reflection. She stares into the fireplace.

She has already returned. She has already forgotten those

                                                          afternoon ceilings

The cactus windowsills

The hall-chime nothingness.

She is watching herself now, with richer satisfaction, in Lumb’s bedroom, tugging a knife through her throat. She plans her splayed, last, carefully ghastly position.
 

Her mind closes.

Her stare comes to rest in the ashtray.

She can hear her watch whispering,

Listening to it, as if trapped inside it.

She has closed her eyes.

She waits

Like a beaten dog

At her trembling cigarette. 

Of Beethoven’s piano sonata Opus 110

Is devouring itself, dragonish,

Scattering scales,

Havocking polished, interior glooms,

Trembling dusty ivy, escaping towards the sky

Through the wedding of apple blossom at the open French

                                                                      windows.

Jennifer is twenty two.

Under her loosened, jarred masses of chestnut

Her profile, long-nosed, lemuroid, lit,

Is pollen-delicate.

She is oppressed

By the fulness of her breasts, and the weight of flame in

                                                                       her face.

She leans her trouble to the keyboard.

Observing her

Through the not-quite-closed corridor door

Her father listens, appalled.

The music flings in his face, it strikes at him

With derisive laughter and contemptuous shouts.

Her hands seem to be plunging and tossing inside his

                                                                          chest.

His skull, glossy, veined, freckled, bulges

Over the small tight ferocious hawk’s face

Evolved in Naval Command. Commander Estridge

Is stricken with the knowledge that his dream of beautiful

                                                                    daughters

Has become a reality.

Simply, naturally, and now inevitably, there by the open

                                                                     window.

The dream was as beautiful as the daughters.

But the reality

Is beyond him. Unmanageable and frightening.

Like leopard cubs suddenly full-grown, come into their

                                 adult power and burdened with it.

Primaeval frames, charged with primaeval hungers and

                                                         primaeval beauty.

Those uncontrollable eyes, and organs of horrific energy,

                                                  demanding satisfaction.

The music she plays bewilders the old man.

He cannot interpret those atmospherics

And soundings and cries.

It is shouting something impossible, incomprehensible,

                                                                    monstrous.

The dutiful hands of his daughters

Which control his days

With routine breakfast egg and toast, with coffee,

With crisply ironed clothes, and warmed bed –

They are tearing him to pieces, elated

Under those sickly, sulphurous blooms

And the hellish upset of music.

In the dark hall, walled with stuffed wild life,

He listens. And he hears

Something final approaching.

Some truly gloomy horror is pushing.

Something that makes nothing of names, or affection, or

                                               loyalty, or consideration.

An evil

Like his own creeping, death-dawn-emptiness fear.

And he knows his daughters are in it, are part of it

Like the flames in fire.

He understands that it is so

And that there is now no other situation to manage but

                                                                            this

Which is beyond him

And that he can only wait for it, and that he is too old.

While the stuffed gulls around him vibrate,

And the stuffed falcons, the foxes, the stuffed great pike

With obedient eyes

And their panes vibrate.

The whole museum of dehydrated, memorial moults

Vibrates, helpless,

Under the girl’s powerful, white, pouncing fingers.

Dwarfish and too old

He steps wirily down into the garden, under sagging

                                                                       conifers

Which are still loaded with cavernous night-chill.

He spiders along the flagged moss-slimed path

And sees the big poppies, planted long ago by his wife,

Coming into bloom, and one, full out, has already dropped

                                                 a crumpled blood-shard,

And he thinks yet again: Too late. And says aloud: I am

                                                                     too late.

He is glad to be clear of his younger daughter

And of everything that pulses in her and swirls flaring

                                                                   round her.

He climbs into the Belvedere at the end of the terrace

And closes the door

And sits. His bulging blood eyeball

Fixed in a lifetime of being imperious

Settles to the lens of the telescope.

He swings it on its pivot.

The village leaps towards him, opening its gardens and

                                                                           doors.

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