Late Twilight 1825
/By David Mullin
After Samuel Palmer
The west yet glimmers with some streaks of day. MACBETH. Act 3, Scene 3.
Remembering the shadow
of the elm trees &
the trembling light
you paint the new moon
haloed
rising over trees
church spire and cottage
a shepherd sleeps with his sheep
the ripe corn
stooked.
You paint so many moons
your room needs
no candles
you sleep in their sweet
visionary gleam as
the anabatic & katabatic winds
move in and out
of the valley of vision.
And the valley is
safe and still now
as you follow the sound of
the wether’s bell through
the gleaning fields
toward the morning star
with your coat tails dragging
through the rising dew you
see the Holy Family
resting
in the last of the light.
The phrases in italics are taken from a poem written by Samuel Palmer called Shoreham: Twilight Time, written in his sketchbook for 1824.
The poem Late Twilight 1825 is based on a painting by Samuel Palmer which can be seen here. The reverse of the painting is inscribed with the quote from Macbeth used in the epigraph.
David Mullin is an archaeologist and writer who currently lives in West Yorkshire. He is interested in the relationships between people, places and things and has previously contributed to two pamphlets: In Search of Paradise: William Blake at Old Wyldes, Hampstead and The Moor Sisters: Bronte Landscapes, Imaginary Worlds published by Nightbird Press. He is in the process of finishing a book about the artist Samuel Palmer and is co-editor of the Journal of the Ted Hughes Society.