4/24/2012

Edith Sitwell - The Dancers


This is  a re-post for two reasons.
- There were some mistakes in the text of the poem in the first post. 
- Reading Robert Graves' 'Goodbye To All That' brought the subject matter back to mind.

Edith Sitwell is almost forgotten among the British literati as far as I can see. She is the greatest poetess in the English language without doubt for me. I went into a leading bookshop in Glasgow recently. They sell the full canon of classical literature. Nobody had heard of her. Deeply sad indeed and a sign of our times. Bought the Collected Poems at Voltaire and Rousseau bookshop in the west end. An oasis in a desert of philistinism and crassness. Here is a gem from the diadem.

The Dancers

The floors are slippery with blood:
The world gyrates too. God is good
That while His wind blows out the light
For those who hourly die for us -
We still can dance each night.

The music has grown numb with death -
But we will suck their dying breath,
The whispered name they breathed to chance,
To swell our music, make it loud
That we may dance, - may dance.

We are the dull blind carrion-fly
That dance and batten. Though God die
Mad from the horror of the light -
The light is mad, too, flecked with blood,
We dance, we dance, each night.

1 comment:

  1. This is an interesting synchronicity, as I just now read reviews of Alice Walker's book of poetry, "Hard Times Require Furious Dancing." This is is a powerful poem. I tend to not seek out these wonderful classic poets, so thank you for the reminder.

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