Authors: Ted Hughes
Flashbulbs all that has happened.
With hardly a footfall sound
Moving like a thought
He reaches his car and his fingers grip at the key which is
not there –
He ransacks every pocket reasoningly
With tightrope walker’s care
While the evening thrushes ring out uncontrollably and
the swifts flare past.
His memory jinks back through every chance
misplacement.
He stands beside his car, stunned by the momentum of
time,
Like one wedged against the piling weight in mid-river at
his limit of depth.
Then the men come round the house-end.
They have heard all that Maud can tell them.
Estridge is struggling with the irrelevance of trying to
stay in control.
The murdered girl, the church basement full of naked, drugged wives, and ritualistic hocus pocus – all that is something for a full enquiry.
But his arguments are lost in mid-torrent.
Evans’ trajectory is direct.
Garten’s face is just a flag, for any prevailing gust.
Holroyd has been convinced and now intends to settle his
private account publicly.
And a number of others
If there is to be any talking, intend to talk with boots
first.
Lumb comes towards them.
He is considering means of playing for a pause and
entangling everybody in words.
But Walsall’s Alsatian
Already the most visibly incensed member of the mob
Liberated
Magnifies suddenly, bouncing towards Lumb
Like a hurtling, runaway wheel off a truck.
Lumb
Has a long second to marvel
At the demented personal malignity
Distorting the mask of this perfect stranger
As it hangs in mid-leap, level with his face, in a halo of
black bristles.
Then he is knocked backwards.
He lies, clear-headed, while the dog’s jaws rave like a
blurring power-saw within inches of his eyes.
He grips its muscled forelegs.
With all his might he wrenches them apart
And the dog’s snarl splits to a damaged yell.
In one move Lumb is up and swinging the coal-sack body
through a full circle
Like a hammer-thrower
To fetch the dog’s spine crack against the stone-built
corner of the garage.
The Alsatian collapses, gets up and careers away twisting
And collapses, chewing its yells.
The men pause, startled by his expert success.
But Walsall
Jerks a garden fork from the edge of a flower-bed and
lobs it like a harpoon.
It thumps Lumb’s left shoulder, and hangs.
He tugs it out but his setback and the obvious wound are
two signals.
Nobody hears Estridge’s restraining shouts about due
process of law.
But Lumb
Has moved again, and has halted Evans
With a soil-solid flowerpot shattered against his chest,
And is away through the hedge.
He is running in the field above Smayle’s garden.
He disappears.
Just as Westlake drives up behind the rectory and
scrambles out with his twelve bore.
The mob gallop after Lumb shouting varied strategies.
Westlake and Estridge huddle back into Westlake’s car.
And full out
With elbowing vigour to spare and confidence to spare
Lumb bounds away uphill.
He flings loose plans ahead of him,
Letting them settle over the whole region, shaping
themselves to the contours,
The woods, the roads, the paths and copses.
But looking back from that first skyline tree-fringe
He sees Garten and Holroyd and Evans are losing no
ground at all.
These men too are hardy animals of the same landscape
And their shouts rake him like missiles.
He lopes out along a hogback
Through ungrazed grass
Toughened with buttercup and young thistles
Toward a hill-crown clump of beeches, black against the
broad glare of sky,
Summit of power in the past.
Beyond that point, he knows, many escapes fall away
diversely into blue distance.
He hoists each stride, trying to be the earth and to toss
himself along weightlessly.
He shutters his awareness from the unmanageably tilting
planes of landscape to right and left
But a big thistle ahead is no help.
His fuel is burning too fast and smokily.
His knees tangle with their chemical limits.
His lungs are suddenly not those of a wolf or even a fox.
He imagines the furious micro-energy and stamina of the
blue-fly
But the idea takes no hold.
The miles of otherworld rootedness weigh in against him.
Static trees are a police of unmoving.
He flounders a little,
Seeming to crawl on the floor of his anxiety
Which is as wide and bare as the sucking space of the sky
now poring over him,
And inspecting him tinily
Through a microscope,
Noticing most of all the immensity and immovability of
the grass on all sides.
With jarring and clambering strides
He hauls himself up among the sheep-worn ramparts of
roots
And under the twisted lichen-splotched, lichen-corroded
Torsos of the beeches
And the stirring leaf mass in its first tenderness.
In the draughty gap among trunks
He lets his stopped body, which he had forced to keep
moving,
Loll and lean to a tree.
His lungs churn, his body flames,
He feels mangled
As if his blood had been pouring through rough iron
channels.
He watches Garten and Evans, toiling on the near slope
like plough-horses,
And far down to the right Holroyd running across.
He sees the whole vista scattered with jogging figures.
And now embracing the tree he flattens himself closely
into it.
With fixed imagination he sinks nerves into the current of
the powerline.
He gulps dense oxygen, recharging his trembling leg-
muscles
Which already the strength no longer quite fits.
He feels his separateness, his healed-over smallness,
among the loose stones and the hoof-printed dust.
These boles are bleak as ruins.
The leaf-towers are too lofty and sparse.
The empty sky looks in from every direction. He looks
out at it,
And staring down into the too wide-open world he sees
suddenly no hope.
The bronze polished light of the lowering sun is without
illusion of any sort.
It brings him a poisonous thinness like the taste of
pennies.
Its shadows are prisonlike and depressing,
Hard-cut as machinery.
Every grass-blade wears its affliction of shadow.
The blueing bowl of landscape
Is a migraine of inescapable fixities, like sunglare in an
empty concrete pool.
A frightening sadness closes on him, as if he were
shrinking,
And a futility
Grabs at his heart-beat, but he has already started
running away from it.
Holroyd’s farm is below.
He vaults a wire, he runs downhill with long, jolting strides
Through a constellation of cows,
Statues of darkness in corollas of fire.
He registers aridity of corrugated iron, cruelty of old nails
Stifling walls of tarred wood,
Creosote grubbiness of old sleepers walling a silage clamp,
The sterility of bare, stony hoof-hammered earth, fringed
with nettles and hemlock.
He climbs to the barn loft
Feeling like an early evening rat.
A minute’s hiding, a minute’s stolen relief
In the happy place, the nest among cornsacks
Where he can press his face into the fustiness.
His deep, scorching breaths suck in the lingering of her
perfume.
He groans under the collision of moments and sprawls,
like a casualty,
And with new fervour clenches his hands,
Opening all his loosened fibres to the globe’s power
And releasing a flood of sweat.
He makes himself nothing, he empties his body of all its
history,
For the inrush of renewals and instructions.
He almost sleeps, in a luxury
Of these shortening seconds
In which they cannot possibly touch him
Before those seconds arrive made of their feet, their
shouts, their eyes.
For a long fantasy he is lost
In details of a court defence
But suddenly shouts are stabbing everywhere around him,
like torchbeams.
He shrinks.
He sheds everything into hungry darkness, he yields into
a raw black fieriness.
He launches his whole being into whatever it is that is
waiting for him.
An impulse bends him, with alacrity and lightness,
At the cock-loft window
As voices and steps climb the ladder to the loft behind
him.
He drops twelve feet
Grosses through the near-empty dutch barn,
And runs out across grass, under a halo of gnats.
And now every stride
Multiplies towards freedom.
And every second
Deepens the defences behind him.
A hare jumps out of the earth and scuds away ahead,
ears up, leaning like a yacht,
Like a guide.
Then shouts catch and trip him, eyes have gripped him.
A landrover is bounding over turf, hands cling where they
can.
Runners are bobbing, heels drive deep moons among the
wolf-spiders.
A banked thorn hedge, a tatter wool gap, is behind him.
Barbed wire, padded with bullock’s hair, is beneath him.
A high rail is strong enough, he vaults over it.
Sheep pour this way and that.
Bullocks gallop off their shock of excitement,
While the air rips in his throat, like a dry piston,
And the blood crisps on his left hand
And all the time his shoulder
Gnaws as if the whole arm-load
Were a swinging iron trap.
Till he topples over the rusty rail
Into the young plantation which is Hagen’s boundary.
He looks back
Just in time to see the landrover misjudge a banked hedge
And keel over, flinging out figures.
Small cries come to him.
He does not stay to identify
Dunworth sitting with his head in his hands letting blood
drip into the grass,
Or Walsall twisted at the awkward angle
Of minimum pain, eyes closed from the pursuit,
Or Evans and Garten
Leading with pitchforks away from the capsized vehicle.
Lumb splashes through brambles among the sparse young
conifers.
Well into the thick, he drops, panting and listening.
Now he concentrates each particular second, cramming it
with recovery.
Long horizontal rays
Finger through the wood, kindling the floss-winged
ephemera.
Safely distant pheasants challenge.
He closes his eyes, trying to feel back to the sure root of
guidance.
He feels his sinewy second wind clearing itself, and his
blood renewing.
He pushes on, foxy-cautious and alert
In a fierce haste, that lifts aside the brambles delicately
as setting a snare.
The low spare plantation is crisp and weary in the late sun.
A few butterflies hither and thither together aimlessly.
Specks with legs crawl glittering on stems, as if in a
dusty sweat.
Wherever he looks down
Through the rafters of grass and weeds
Ants are racing from crisis to crisis.
Baffled shouts probe the plantation.
He flattens under brambles, in a drainage channel,
And watches Garten wading past, face glossed in the level
sun,
The pitchfork glinting.
As the shouts go off
He sidles along low and comes to a rail and peers over
To reconnoitre forward.
He pulls himself erect.
A light electric shock touches him.
The landrover’s horribly familiar mass is there, ten yards
away.
It emits a shout.
Lumb realises with nausea he has come in a circle, like a
simple fool.
Simultaneously
An explosion encloses his head, like a sudden bag.
Shot slashes weak leaves.
A pain clubs his fingertip.
He drops, dragging backwards, and turns, and runs
In lit smoking of pollen and dust.
Another blind shot wounds the wood’s depth dully.
He leaps on different grounds.
And now in a roofless tumblestone linney, he props
himself back in a corner.
Burdock, nettles, brambles mound over tile-heaps and
jags of beams.
He fights to quiet his breath forcibly and to repair his
shaking body.
The sweat melts on his face full in the facing hot-coin sun.
A crackling approaches, Lumb withers into his corner,
And Evans, pushing in over the debris, positions himself
leisurely
And urinates ponderously on to a camp of nettles, with a
hard sigh.
Turning, contemplative, he meets Lumb’s stare
Who even now feels he might slide aside from under this
confrontation unseen.
But Evans’ incredulous ‘Bloody Hell!’ splits with a bellow
to the whole landscape.
The gloating pitchfork, prongs downfanged, inches
gleaming toward Lumb
Slowly tightening this corner to certainty
While Evans’ face tightens, as if he were to splinter the
levelled shaft in his grip.