Lyrics If I were tickled by the rub of Love - Dylan Thomas
If
I
were
tickled
by
the
rub
of
love,
A
rooking
girl
who
stole
me
for
her
side,
Broke
through
her
straws,
breaking
my
bandaged
string,
If
the
red
tickle
as
the
cattle
calve
Still
set
to
scratch
a
laughter
from
my
lung,
I
would
not
fear
the
apple
nor
the
flood
Nor
the
bad
blood
of
spring.
Shall
it
be
male
or
female?
say
the
cells,
And
drop
the
plum
like
fire
from
the
flesh.
If
I
were
tickled
by
the
hatching
hair,
The
winging
bone
that
sprouted
in
the
heels,
The
itch
of
man
upon
the
baby′s
thigh,
I
would
not
fear
the
gallows
nor
the
axe
Nor
the
crossed
sticks
of
war.
Shall
it
be
male
or
female?
say
the
fingers
That
chalk
the
walls
with
green
girls
and
their
men.
I
would
not
fear
the
muscling-in
of
love
If
I
were
tickled
by
the
urchin
hungers
Rehearsing
heat
upon
a
raw-edged
nerve.
I
would
not
fear
the
devil
in
the
loin
Nor
the
outspoken
grave.
If
I
were
tickled
by
the
lovers'
rub
That
wipes
away
not
crow′s-foot
nor
the
lock
Of
sick
old
manhood
on
the
fallen
jaws,
Would
leave
me
cold
as
butter
for
the
flies,
The
sea
of
scums
could
drown
me
as
it
broke
Dead
on
the
sweethearts'
toes.
This
world
is
half
the
devil's
and
my
own,
Daft
with
the
drug
that′s
smoking
in
a
girl
And
curling
round
the
bud
that
forks
her
eye.
An
old
man′s
shank
one-marrowed
with
my
bone,
And
all
the
herrings
smelling
in
the
sea,
I
sit
and
watch
the
worm
beneath
my
nail
Wearing
the
quick
away.
And
that's
the
rub,
the
only
rub
that
tickles.
The
knobbly
ape
that
swings
along
his
sex
From
damp
love-darkness
and
the
nurse′s
twist
Can
never
raise
the
midnight
of
a
chuckle,
Nor
when
he
finds
a
beauty
in
the
breast
Of
loever,
mother,
lovers,
or
his
six
Feet
in
the
rubbing
dust.
And
what's
the
rub?
Death′s
feather
on
the
nerve?
Your
mouth,
my
love,
the
thistle
in
the
kiss?
My
Jack
of
Christ
born
thorny
on
the
tree?
The
words
of
death
are
dryer
than
his
stiff,
My
wordy
wounds
are
printed
with
your
hair.
I
would
be
tickled
by
the
rub
that
is:
Man
be
my
metaphor.
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