Out of a war of wits

Dylan Thomas

1914 to 1953

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Fell hard as whips on an old wound,
Praise that my body be whole, I’ve limbs,
To purge after the wits’ fight,
Not stumps, after the hour of battle,
And be struck dumb, if only for a time.
It is good to step onto the earth, alone,
It is good that the sun shine,
Out of a war of wits, when folly of words
My brain came crying into the fresh light,
I stand beneath the clouds’ confessional,
After a volley of questions and replies
Where men would argue till the stars be green,
After the perils of friends’ talk
And the sun heals, closing sore eyes.
For the body’s brittle and the skin’s white.
Was the world’s to me, and syllables
For out of a house of matchboard and stone
Overwhelmed by the sun, with a torn brain
Reach asking arms up to the milky sky,
And I was struck dumb by the sun.
Called for confessor but there was none
But the hot beams rob me of speech,
Lift wit-hurt head for sun to sympathize,
Praise that only the wits are hurt after the wits’ fight.
And, after it has sunk, the sane moon,

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