Ted Hughes
The swallow of
summer, she toils all the summer,
A blue-dark knot of glittering
voltage,
A whiplash swimmer, a fish of the air.
But the serpent
of cars that crawls through the dust
In shimmering
exhaust
Searching to slake
Its fever in
ocean
Will play and be idle or else it will bust.
The
swallow of summer, the barbed harpoon,
She flings from the furnace, a rainbow
of purples,
Dips her glow in the pond and is perfect.
But the
serpent of cars that collapsed on the beach
Disgorges its
organs
A scamper of colours
Which roll like
tomatoes
Nude as tomatoes
With sand in their
creases
To cringe in the sparkle of rollers and screech.
The swallow of summer, the seamstress of summer,
She scissors the
blue into shapes and she sews it,
She draws a long thread and she knots it at
the corners.
But the holiday people
Are laid out like
wounded
Flat as in ovens
Roasting and
basting
With faces of torment as space burns them
blue
Their heads are transistors
Their teeth grit on
sand grains
Their lost kids are squalling
While
man-eating flies
Jab electric shock needles but what can they do?
They can climb in their cars with raw bodies, raw faces
And
start up the serpent
And headache it homeward
A car
full of squabbles
And sobbing and stickiness
With sand
in their crannies
Inhaling petroleum
That pours from
the foxgloves
While the evening swallow
The swallow of summer,
cartwheeling through crimson,
Touches the honey-slow river and
turning
Returns to the hand stretched from under the eaves -
A boomerang
of rejoicing shadow.