Out of a war of wits

Dylan Thomas

1914 to 1953

Poem Image
Track 1

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Every 10th word

Out of a war of wits, when folly of
Was the world’s to me, and syllables
Fell hard whips on an old wound,
My brain came crying the fresh light,
Called for confessor but there was
To purge after the wits’ fight,
And I was dumb by the sun.
Praise that my body be whole, I’ve limbs,
Not stumps, after the hour of battle,
the body’s brittle and the skin’s white.
Praise that the wits are hurt after the wits’ fight.
Overwhelmed the sun, with a torn brain
I stand beneath clouds’ confessional,
But the hot beams rob me of speech,
After the perils of friends’ talk
Reach asking arms to the milky sky,
After a volley of questions replies
Lift wit-hurt head for sun to sympathize,
And sun heals, closing sore eyes.
It is good that sun shine,
And, after it has sunk, the sane moon,
For out of a house of matchboard and stone
men would argue till the stars be green,
It good to step onto the earth, alone,
And be dumb, if only for a time.