from Briggflatts: An Autobiography
I
 Brag, sweet tenor bull,
 descant on Rawthey’s madrigal,
 each pebble its part
 for the fells’ late spring.
 Dance tiptoe, bull,
 black against may.
 Ridiculous and lovely
 chase hurdling shadows
 morning into noon.
 May on the bull’s hide
 and through the dale
 furrows fill with may,
 paving the slowworm’s way.
 A mason times his mallet
 to a lark’s twitter,
 listening while the marble rests,
 lays his rule
 at a letter’s edge,
 fingertips checking,
 till the stone spells a name
 naming none,
 a man abolished.
 Painful lark, labouring to rise!
 The solemn mallet says:
 In the grave’s slot
 he lies. We rot.
 Decay thrusts the blade,
 wheat stands in excrement
 trembling. Rawthey trembles.
 Tongue stumbles, ears err
 for fear of spring.
 Rub the stone with sand,
 wet sandstone rending
 roughness away. Fingers
 ache on the rubbing stone.
 The mason says: Rocks
 happen by chance.
 No one here bolts the door,
 love is so sore.
 Stone smooth as skin,
 cold as the dead they load
 on a low lorry by night.
 The moon sits on the fell
 but it will rain.
 Under sacks on the stone
 two children lie,
 hear the horse stale,
 the mason whistle,
 harness mutter to shaft,
 felloe to axle squeak,
 rut thud the rim,
 crushed grit.
 Stocking to stocking, jersey to jersey,
 head to a hard arm,
 they kiss under the rain,
 bruised by their marble bed.
 In Garsdale, dawn;
 at Hawes, tea from the can.
 Rain stops, sacks
 steam in the sun, they sit up.
 Copper-wire moustache,
 sea-reflecting eyes
 and Baltic plainsong speech
 declare: By such rocks
 men killed Bloodaxe.
 Fierce blood throbs in his tongue,
 lean words.
 Skulls cropped for steel caps
 huddle round Stainmore.
 Their becks ring on limestone,
 whisper to peat.
 The clogged cart pushes the horse downhill.
 In such soft air
 they trudge and sing,
 laying the tune frankly on the air.
 All sounds fall still,
 feilside bleat,
 hide-and-seek peewit.
 Her pulse their pace,
 palm countering palm,
 till a trench is filled,
 stone white as cheese
 jeers at the dale.
 Knotty wood, hard to rive,
 smoulders to ash;
 smell of October apples.
 The road again,
 at a trot.
 Wetter, warmed, they watch
 the mason meditate
 on name and date.
 Rain rinses the road,
 the bull streams and laments.
 Sour rye porridge from the hob
 with cream and black tea,
 meat, crust and crumb.
 Her parents in bed
 the children dry their clothes.
 He has untied the tape
 of her striped flannel drawers
 before the range. Naked
 on the pricked rag mat
 his fingers comb
 thatch of his manhood’s home.
 Gentle generous voices weave
 over bare night
 words to confirm and delight
 till bird dawn.
 Rainwater from the butt
 she fetches and flannel
 to wash him inch by inch,
 kissing the pebbles.
 Shining slowworm part of the marvel.
 The mason stirs:
 Words!
 Pens are too light.
 Take a chisel to write.
 Every birth a crime,
 every sentence life.
 Wiped of mould and mites
 would the ball run true?
 No hope of going back.
 Hounds falter and stray,
 shame deflects the pen.
 Love murdered neither bleeds nor stifles
 but jogs the draftsman’s elbow.
 What can he, changed, tell
 her, changed, perhaps dead?
 Delight dwindles. Blame
 stays the same.
 Brief words are hard to find,
 shapes to carve and discard:
 Bloodaxe, king of York,
 king of Dublin, king of Orkney.
 Take no notice of tears;
 letter the stone to stand
 over love laid aside lest
 insufferable happiness impede
 flight to Stainmore,
 to trace
 lark, mallet,
 becks, flocks
 and axe knocks.
 Dung will not soil the slowworm’s
 mosaic. Breathless lark
 drops to nest in sodden trash;
 Rawthey truculent, dingy.
 Drudge at the mallet, the may is down,
 fog on fells. Guilty of spring
 and spring’s ending
 amputated years ache after
 the bull is beef, love a convenience.
 It is easier to die than to remember.
 Name and date
 split in soft slate
 a few months obliterate.
                
                    
                        Basil Bunting, “Briggflatts (Part 1)” from Complete Poems, edited by Richard Caddel. Reprinted with the permission of Bloodaxe Books Ltd., www.bloodaxebooks.com.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        Collected Poems
                                                                                                                                                                    (Bloodaxe Books, 1968)