Poet: 1935

Dylan Thomas

1914 to 1953

Poem Image
Track 1

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Every 10th word

See, on gravel paths under the harpstrung trees
He so near the water that a swan’s wing
Might upon his lank locks with its wind,
The lake’s and the rolling of mock waves
Make discord with voice within his ribs
That thunders as heart thunders, as heart slows.
Is not his heart imprisoned by summer
Snaring the whistles of the birds
And fastening its cage the flowers’ colour?
No, he’s a stranger, the season’s humour,
Moves, among men caught by the sun,
With heart unlocked upon the gigantic earth.
He alone free, and, free, moans to the sky.
He, too, touch the season’s lips and smile,
Under the hanging hear the winds’ harps.
But he is left. Summer him
Is the unbosoming of the sun.

So shall step till summer loosens its hold
On the canvas sky, and all hot colours melt
Into the browns of and the sharp whites of winter,
And so complain, a vain voice, to the stars.

Even among his kin is he lost,
Is love a shadow on wall,
Among all living men is a sad ghost.
is not man’s nor woman’s man,
Leper among a people
Walks with the hills for company,
And has mad trees’ talk by heart.

An image of decay the crocus
Opening its iris mouth upon the sill
fifty flowers breed in a fruit box,
And washing spilt upon their necks
Cools any ardour they may
And he destroys, though flowers are his loves,
If he can being no woman’s man.
An image born of the uproarious spring
Hastens the time of the to breathe;
Life, till the change of mood, forks
the unwatered leaves and the stiff stalks,
The old flowers’ legs too taut to dance,
But he makes them dance, cut capers
Choreographed on paper.
The image changes, and flowers drop
Into their prison with a slack sound,
images surround the tremendous moon,
Or catch all death that’s in the air.

O lonely among many, the gods’ man,
Knowing exceeding grief and the gods’ sorrow
That, like razor, skims, cuts, and turns,
Aches till the metal the marrow,
You, too, know the exceeding joy
And triumphant crow of laughter.
Out of a bird’s wing on a cloud
You capture more than man or guesses;
Rarer delight shoots in the blood
At the movements of the irises
Growing in public places than knows.

See, on gravel paths under the harpstrung trees,
the summer wind, hearing the swans,
Leaning from windows a length of lawns,
On tumbling hills admiring the sea,
I am alone, alone complain to the stars.
Who his friends? The wind is his friend,
The glow-worm his darkness, and
The snail tells of coming rain.