Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song A Winter's Tale, artist - Dylan Thomas.
Date of issue: 24.01.2019
Song language: English
A Winter's Tale |
It is a winter’s tale |
That the snow blind twilight ferries over the lakes |
And floating fields from the farm in the cup of the vales, |
Gliding windless through the hand folded flakes, |
The pale breath of cattle at the stealthy sail, |
And the stars falling cold, |
And the smell of hay in the snow, and the far owl |
Warning among the folds, and the frozen hold |
Flocked with the sheep white smoke of the farm house cowl |
In the river wended vales where the tale was told. |
Once when the world turned old |
On a star of faith pure as the drifting bread, |
As the food and flames of the snow, a man unrolled |
The scrolls of fire that burned in his heart and head, |
Torn and alone in a farm house in a fold |
Of fields. |
And burning then |
In his firelit island ringed by the winged snow |
And the dung hills white as wool and the hen |
Roosts sleeping chill till the flame of the cock crow |
Combs through the mantled yards and the morning men |
Stumble out with their spades, |
The cattle stirring, the mousing cat stepping shy, |
The puffed birds hopping and hunting, the milkmaids |
Gentle in their clogs over the fallen sky, |
And all the woken farm at its white trades, |
He knelt, he wept, he prayed, |
By the spit and the black pot in the log bright light |
And the cup and the cut bread in the dancing shade, |
In the muffled house, in the quick of night, |
At the point of love, forsaken and afraid. |
He knelt on the cold stones, |
He wept form the crest of grief, he prayed to the veiled sky |
May his hunger go howling on bare white bones |
Past the statues of the stables and the sky roofed sties |
And the duck pond glass and the blinding byres alone |
Into the home of prayers |
And fires where he should prowl down the cloud |
Of his snow blind love and rush in the white lairs. |
His naked need struck him howling and bowed |
Though no sound flowed down the hand folded air |
But only the wind strung |
Hunger of birds in the fields of the bread of water, tossed |
In high corn and the harvest melting on their tongues. |
And his nameless need bound him burning and lost |
When cold as snow he should run the wended vales among |
The rivers mouthed in night, |
And drown in the drifts of his need, and lie curled caught |
In the always desiring centre of the white |
Inhuman cradle and the bride bed forever sought |
By the believer lost and the hurled outcast of light. |
Deliver him, he cried, |
By losing him all in love, and cast his need |
Alone and naked in the engulfing bride, |
Never to flourish in the fields of the white seed |
Or flower under the time dying flesh astride. |
Listen. |
The minstrels sing |
In the departed villages. |
The nightingale, |
Dust in the buried wood, flies on the grains of her wings |
And spells on the winds of the dead his winter’s tale. |
The voice of the dust of water from the withered spring |
Is telling. |
The wizened |
Stream with bells and baying water bounds. |
The dew rings |
On the gristed leaves and the long gone glistening |
Parish of snow. |
The carved mouths in the rock are wind swept strings. |
Time sings through the intricately dead snow drop. |
Listen. |
It was a hand or sound |
In the long ago land that glided the dark door wide |
And there outside on the bread of the ground |
A she bird rose and rayed like a burning bride. |
A she bird dawned, and her breast with snow and scarlet downed. |
Look. |
And the dancers move |
On the departed, snow bushed green, wanton in moon light |
As a dust of pigeons. |
Exulting, the grave hooved |
Horses, centaur dead, turn and tread the drenched white |
Paddocks in the farms of birds. |
The dead oak walks for love. |
The carved limbs in the rock |
Leap, as to trumpets. |
Calligraphy of the old |
Leaves is dancing. |
Lines of age on the stones weave in a flock. |
And the harp shaped voice of the water’s dust plucks in a fold |
Of fields. |
For love, the long ago she bird rises. |
Look. |
And the wild wings were raised |
Above her folded head, and the soft feathered voice |
Was flying through the house as though the she bird praised |
And all the elements of the slow fall rejoiced |
That a man knelt alone in the cup of the vales, |
In the mantle and calm, |
By the spit and the black pot in the log bright light. |
And the sky of birds in the plumed voice charmed |
Him up and he ran like a wind after the kindling flight |
Past the blind barns and byres of the windless farm. |
In the poles of the year |
When black birds died like priests in the cloaked hedge row |
And over the cloth of counties the far hills rode near, |
Under the one leaved trees ran a scarecrow of snow |
And fast through the drifts of the thickets antlered like deer, |
Rags and prayers down the knee- |
Deep hillocks and loud on the numbed lakes, |
All night lost and long wading in the wake of the she- |
Bird through the times and lands and tribes of the slow flakes. |
Listen and look where she sails the goose plucked sea, |
The sky, the bird, the bride, |
The cloud, the need, the planted stars, the joy beyond |
The fields of seed and the time dying flesh astride, |
The heavens, the heaven, the grave, the burning font. |
In the far ago land the door of his death glided wide, |
And the bird descended. |
On a bread white hill over the cupped farm |
And the lakes and floating fields and the river wended |
Vales where he prayed to come to the last harm |
And the home of prayers and fires, the tale ended. |
The dancing perishes |
On the white, no longer growing green, and, minstrel dead, |
The singing breaks in the snow shoed villages of wishes |
That once cut the figures of birds on the deep bread |
And over the glazed lakes skated the shapes of fishes |
Flying. |
The rite is shorn |
Of nightingale and centaur dead horse. |
The springs wither |
Back. |
Lines of age sleep on the stones till trumpeting dawn. |
Exultation lies down. |
Time buries the spring weather |
That belled and bounded with the fossil and the dew reborn. |
For the bird lay bedded |
In a choir of wings, as though she slept or died, |
And the wings glided wide and he was hymned and wedded, |
And through the thighs of the engulfing bride, |
The woman breasted and the heaven headed |
Bird, he was brought low, |
Burning in the bride bed of love, in the whirl- |
Pool at the wanting centre, in the folds |
Of paradise, in the spun bud of the world. |
And she rose with him flowering in her melting snow. |