Walter de la Mare

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THE LISTENERS, by Walter de la Mare

‘Is there anybody there?’ said the Traveller,
Knocking on the moonlit door;
And his horse in the silence champed the grasses
Of the forest’s ferny floor:
And a bird flew up out of the turret,
Above the Traveller’s head:
And he smote upon the door again a second time;
‘Is there anybody there?’ he said.
But no one descended to the Traveller;
No head from the leaf-fringed sill
Leaned over and looked into his grey eyes,
Where he stood perplexed and still.
But only a host of phantom listeners
That dwelt in the lone house then
Stood listening in the quiet of the moonlight
To that voice from the world of men:
Stood thronging the faint moonbeams on the dark stair,
That goes down to the empty hall,
Hearkening in an air stirred and shaken
By the lonely Traveller’s call.
And he felt in his heart their strangeness,
Their stillness answering his cry,
While his horse moved, cropping the dark turf,
’Neath the starred and leafy sky;
For he suddenly smote on the door, even
Louder, and lifted his head:—
‘Tell them I came, and no one answered,
That I kept my word,’ he said.
Never the least stir made the listeners,
Though every word he spake
Fell echoing through the shadowiness of the still house
From the one man left awake:
Ay, they heard his foot upon the stirrup,
And the sound of iron on stone,
And how the silence surged softly backward,
When the plunging hoofs were gone.



Poetry is not my thing, but I must say , Im rather impressed. (y)
 
Just reviving this thread, and suggesting that, if one of the Chrons officers would be so kind as to shift it to the Literary Fiction area, that would be appreciated.

And appropriate, more so than "Classic SF&F." De la Mare was a gifted and well-regarded poet and writer whose publication was mainly in the literary journals of his day.


Randy M.
 
Im not at all familiar with his work.

There are several collections which would be well worth your looking into, as far as stories go, and his Collected Poems is generally found fairly cheaply, and contains some magnificent work. As has been said, his stories are at times almost too subtle, but a careful reading of them is most rewarding....
 
How about a discussion -- over several months -- of Behold, This Dreamer!

That's de la Mare's 1939 anthology -- but "anthology" might not suggest how much of the book is by de la Mare himself -- with the subtitle "Of Reverie, Night, Sleep, Dream, Love-Dreams, Nightmare, Death, the Unconscious, the Imagination, Divination, the Artist, and Kindred Subjects."
 
There are three copies of the edition I have for under $5 postpaid here (US):

 
On page 5, de la Mare mentions Dunne. He means the author of An Experiment with Time. What a present book that was in many authors' minds at one time: John Buchan, C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, J. B. Priestley, and others whose names don't come to mind. It may be that Dunne's book has been weighed in the balances of a fair examination and found seriously wanting, but my guess is that it's just been mostly forgotten because other books have been put under the spotlight of the mass media, etc. since then. I admit I haven't read my copy yet -- I have the blue and white edition shown below, though that isn't my copy -- but I would rather read it than a lot of books currently in the news.

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Nonfiction I see and it appears the author augmented it with four sequels. Almost like the real Dune.
 
Seriously, maybe we should have a thread for A Question of Time here.
 
I wonder if "Behold, this dreamer" is familiar to readers today. The phrase is from Genesis 37, where the resentful brothers of young Joseph are thinking of his dream that indicates he will have precedence over them.

------19 And they said one to another, Behold, this dreamer cometh.
20 Come now therefore, and let us slay him, and cast him into some pit, and we will say, Some evil beast hath devoured him: and we shall see what will become of his dreams.
21 And Reuben heard it, and he delivered him out of their hands; and said, Let us not kill him.-----

As I comment on the book, page references are to the Faber and Faber paperback edition of 1984, which seems to be a photoreprint of the original 1937 publication. The book is scanned at archive.org!

17/ "...to resort to candles even for a few hours is to realise what an aid their gentle light can be to quiet of mind and quiet talk … And, summer or winter, candles are even a kind of company."

18/ "We dance attendance on daylight by instinct and confirmed habit; we should make an assignation with the night."

There are good passages on night and the stars in Dale C. Allison's The Silence of Angels.

I've started a thread for us to post our evaluation of our night skies:


Already de la Mare's book invites us to respond imaginatively to the "ordinary" -- except that, increasingly even when he wrote over 80 years ago, night-darkness may be unavailable in anything like its natural form.

And it can be frightening!

 
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By the way, I just read de la Mare's short book Ding Dong Bell, which is three short stories preceded by some epigraphs, mostly, as I recall (I returned the book to the library) by 17th-century authors, Sir Thomas Browne, Robert Burton...

The stories all feature tombstones with epitaphs, and it seems it would be more true to say the stories are about epitaphs than specifically about death. They are about remembering the dead and turning those memories into art.

I don't think people do this any more -- adorn graveyard markers with rhymes about the departed or, more generally, about the fleetingness of life, the hope of the resurrection, etc. One more "folk art" that has been let go?
 
Behold, This Dreamer! is scanned at the valuable archive.org site.

Go here:

[archive.org]

for de la Mare's account of a curious experience (pp. 39-40 in the book).

On page 41, his reference to the purest and deepest sleep providing a "reconciling" brought to my mind a passage in Machen's The Green Round -- my favorite of his three novels -- about a dream in which the burden fell off. (The novel isn't available on archive.org, but I should be able to locate the passage and quote some of it here.)

On page 45, his "Sleep, however" paragraph speaks of the strangeness and necessity of sleep:


And go here for de la Mare's "hallucination" of Botticelli's Flora (from the Primavera painting) -- starts on the bottom of page 58 of the text:

 
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I mean to delve pretty seriously into writings by de la Mare in months ahead and will presumably post comments here. Is anyone interested in reading him with me?

I intend to read his supernatural novel The Return, which may be read online here:


It seems Lovecraft admired this novel, by the way.

I mean also to read quite a bit of his poetry -- I have his collected poetry on hand and also his collected verse for young readers; perhaps two of his anthologies, namely Behold, This Dreamer! and Desert Islands; and the stories he selected for his Best collection. Maybe other things too, but these I'm pretty sure of. But anyone can read & comment on anything by him.
 
In fact, I'm going to post a few edited comments on Behold, This Dreamer! that I posted at the Eldritch Dark forum site. They'll give some impression of de la Mare's sensibility and the reflections he might prompt. (The discussion there fizzled out, perhaps largely because at the time I had some health issues that had an impact on my plans and projects -- seem to be much better now.)

This is a 1939 anthology -- but "anthology" might not suggest how much of the book is by de la Mare himself -- with the subtitle "Of Reverie, Night, Sleep, Dream, Love-Dreams, Nightmare, Death, the Unconscious, the Imagination, Divination, the Artist, and Kindred Subjects."

My guess is that discussion of this anthology should welcome "digressions," provided that they relate in some reasonable way to the book at hand. Thus some readers might be prompted by something de la Mare says, to mention a dream. But we wouldn't want to wait too long to get back to de la Mare even if we went down that path a while. That's just my notion of what this thread might do.

Dreams? Here's a journal entry from 18 April 1982:

----Just awoke (alarm clock) from a dream about Lord Dunsany. He was a lovable old man. Had a deep voice. He was very old but apparently was a friend of the family... maybe he was family? [We lived in Oregon and have no connections with Ireland, by the way.] ...I was just beginning to tell him that his writing had given me a lot of pleasure for years ... when he pulled out a sort of wallet and took out some sort of slip and showed it to me and reminded me that I owed him 7.03 -- for a bus ticket (?) to "Pasadena" I had as a kid bought, I think. So Dad (I think) and I chuckled and I took out some money, first paying him 4 cents ("interest") then going into the paper money -- I had pounds, dollars, and roubles all mixed together. Then I woke up.----

I wouldn't be able now to say whether I'd been reading anything by Dunsany lately, but I'd read Mark Amory's biography of Dunsany about a month previously.

By the way, de la Mare's anthology Early One Morning in the Spring, on childhood, was very good, and you shouldn't shy away from it thinking it might be a bunch of sentimentalism.
 
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More on Behold, This Dreamer!
I wonder if the title's allusion is familiar to readers today. It's from Genesis 37, where resentful brothers of young Joseph are thinking of his dream that indicates he will have precedence over them.

------19 And they said one to another, Behold, this dreamer cometh.
20 Come now therefore, and let us slay him, and cast him into some pit, and we will say, Some evil beast hath devoured him: and we shall see what will become of his dreams.
21 And Reuben heard it, and he delivered him out of their hands; and said, Let us not kill him.-----

Page references are to the Faber and Faber paperback edition of 1984, which seems to be a photoreprint of the original 1937 publication.

4/De la Mare suggests: Within and without: to me, all that I know of the within is "mind," and all that I know of the without is "matter."

I would hesitate completely to endorse this without further reflection, but it must often seem so, at least.

17/ "...to resort to candles even for a few hours is to realise what an aid their gentle light can be to quiet of mind and quiet talk … And, summer or winter, candles are even a kind of company."

18/ "We dance attendance on daylight by instinct and confirmed habit; we should make an assignation with the night."

There are good passages on night and the stars in Dale C. Allison's The Silence of Angels.

Use the Bortle Scale to evaluate your own night sky:

[astrobackyard.com]

M31 is the Andromeda Galaxy. On a clear night, I can see it from near my home (i.e. less than 5 minutes' walk) in a rural North Dakota town. In fact, I'm pretty sure I can see it from my yard. Offhand I'd say my immediate night-sky environment may be placed as Bortle Scale Class 4. I'm not savvy enough to spot M33 at the moment.

Let me invite my cosmicist readers to join with me in membership in the International Dark Sky Association.

[www.darksky.org]

Already de la Mare's book invites us to respond imaginatively to the "ordinary" -- except that, increasingly even when he wrote over 80 years ago, night-darkness may be unavailable in anything like its natural form.
 

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