Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song In the White Giant's Thigh, artist - Dylan Thomas.
Date of issue: 30.09.2012
Song language: English
In the White Giant's Thigh |
Through throats where many rivers meet, the curlews cry |
Under the conceiving moon, on the high chalk hill, |
And there this night I walk in the white giant’s thigh |
Where barren as boulders women lie longing still |
To labour and love though they lay down long ago. |
Through throats where many rivers meet, the women pray, |
Pleading in the waded bay for the seed to flow |
Though the names on their weed grown stones are rained |
Away |
And alone in the night’s eternal, curving act |
They yearn with tongues of curlews for the unconceived |
And immemorial sons of the cudgelling, hacked |
Hill. |
Who once in gooseskin winter loved all ice leaved |
In the courters' lanes, or twined in the ox roasting |
Sun |
In the wains tonned so high that the wisps of the hay |
Clung to the pitching clouds, or gay with any one |
Young as they in the after milking moonlight lay |
Under the lighted shapes of faith and their moonshade |
Petticoats galed high, or shy with the rough riding |
Boys, |
Now clasp me to their grains in the gigantic glade, |
Who once, green countries since, were a hedgerow of Joys. |
Time by, their dust was flesh the swineherd rooted sly, |
Flared in the reek of the wiving sty with the rush |
Light of his thighs, spreadeagle to the dunghill sky, |
Or with their orchard man in the core of the sun’s bush |
Rough as cows' tongues and trashed with brambles their |
Buttermilk |
Manes, under his quenchless summer barbed gold to the |
Bone, |
Or rippling soft in the spinney moon as the silk |
And ducked and draked white lake that harps to a hail |
Stone. |
Who once were a bloom of wayside brides in the hawed |
House |
And heard the lewd, wooed field flow to the coming |
Frost, |
The scurrying, furred small friars squeal, in the dowse |
Of day, in the thistle aisles, till the white owl |
Crossed |
Their breast, the vaulting does roister, the horned |
Bucks climb |
Quick in the wood at love, where a torch of foxes |
Foams, |
All birds and beasts of the linked night uproar and |
Chime |
And the mole snout blunt under his pilgrimage of domes, |
Or, butter fat goosegirls, bounced in a gambo bed, |
Their breasts full of honey, under their gander king |
Trounced by his wings in the hissing shippen, long dead |
And gone that barley dark where their clogs danced in The spring, |
And their firefly hairpins flew, and the ricks ran |
Round — |
(But nothing bore, no mouthing babe to the veined hives |
Hugged, and barren and bare on Mother Goose’s ground |
They with the simple Jacks were a boulder of wives) — |
Now curlew cry me down to kiss the mouths of their |
Dust. |
The dust of their kettles and clocks swings to and fro |
Where the hay rides now or the bracken kitchens rust |
As the arc of the billhooks that flashed the hedges low |
And cut the birds' boughs that the minstrel sap ran |
Red. |
They from houses where the harvest bows, hold me hard, |
Who heard the tall bell sail down the Sundays of the |
Dead |
And the rain wring out it’s tongues on the faded yard, |
Teach me the love that is evergreen after the fall |
Leaved |
Grave, after Beloved on the grass gulfed cross is Scrubbed |
Off by the sun and Daughters no longer grieved |
Save by their long desirers in the fox cubbed |
Streets or hungering in the crumbled wood: to these |
Hale dead and deathless do the women of the hill |
Love for ever meridian through the courters' trees |
And the daughters of darkness flame like Fawkes fires |
Still. |