Sonnets At Christmas I, II (Alan Tate)

Aan alle bezoekers en mede-bloggers een Prettig Kerstfeest!

 

 

 

 

L’adoration des bergers (détail), Jean Le Clerc (1586 – 1633)

 

 

Sonnets At Christmas I

This is the day His hour of life draws near,
Let me get ready from head to foot for it
Most handily with eyes to pick the year
For small feed to reward a feathered wit.

Some men would see it an epiphany
At ease, at food and drink, others at chase
Yet I, stung lassitude, with ecstasy
Unspent argue the season’s difficult case

So: Man, dull critter of enormous head,
What would he look at in the coiling sky?
But I must kneel again unto the Dead

While Christmas bells of paper white and red,
Figured with boys and girls spilt from a sled,
Ring out the silence I am nourished by.

 

Sonnets At Christmas II

Ah, Christ, I love you rings to the wild sky
And I must think a little of the past:
When I was ten I told a stinking lie
That got a black boy whipped; but now at last

The going years, caught in an accurate glow,
Reverse like balls englished upon green baize-
Let them return, let the round trumpets blow
The ancient crackle of the Christ’s deep gaze.

Deafened and blind, with senses yet unfound,
Am I, untutored to the after-wit
Of knowledge, knowing a nightmare has no sound;

Therefore with idle hands and head I sit
In late December before the fire’s daze
Punished by crimes of which I would be quit.

 


Allen Tate (19 november 1899 – 9 februari 1979)

 

Zie voor de schrijvers van de 26e december mijn vorige blog van vandaag en eveneens mijn derde, mijn tweede en mijn eerste blog van vandaag.