It's No Use Raising a Shout

It's no use raising a shout. No, Honey, you can cut that right out. I don't want any more hugs; Make me some fresh tea, fetch me some rugs. Here am I, here are you: But what does it mean? What are we going to do? A long time ago I told my mother I was leaving home to find another: I never answered her letter But I never found a better. Here am I, here are you: But what does it mean? What are we going to do? It wasn't always like this? Perhaps it wasn't, but it is. Put the car away; when life fails, What the good of going to Wales? Here am I, here are you: But what does it mean? What are we going to do? In my spine there was a base, And I knew the general's face: But they've severed all the wires, And I can't tell what the general desires. Here am I, here are you: But what does it mean? What are we going to do? In my veins there is a wish, And a memory of fish: When I lie crying on the floor, It says, 'You've often done this before.' Here am I, here are you: But what does it mean? What are we going to do? A bird used to visit this shore: It isn't going to come any more. I've come a very long way to prove No land, no water, and no love. Here am I, here are you. But what does it mean? What are we going to do?

'Carry Her Over The Water'

Carry her over the water, And set her down under the tree, Where the culvers white all day and all night, And the winds from every quarter, Sing agreeably, agreeably, agreeably of love. Put a gold ring on her finger, And press her close to your heart, While the fish in the lake snapshots take, And the frog, that sanguine singer, Sing agreeably, agreeably, agreeably of love. The streets shal flock to your marriage, The houses turn round to look, The tables and chairs say suitable prayers, And the horses drawing your carriage Sing agreeably, agreeably, agreeably of love.

1939?

THE TRAVELLER

No window in his suburb lights that bedroom where A little fever heard large afternoons at play: His meadows multiply: that mill, though is not there Which went on grinding at the back of love all day. Nor all his weeping ways through weary wastes have found The Castle where his Greater Hallows are interned: For broken bridges halt him, and dark thickets round
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