Lyrics Lament - Dylan Thomas
When
I
was
a
windy
boy
and
a
bit
And
the
black
spit
of
the
chapel
fold,
(Sighed
the
old
ram
rod,
dying
of
women),
I
tiptoed
shy
in
the
gooseberry
wood,
The
rude
owl
cried
like
a
tell-tale
tit,
I
skipped
in
a
blush
as
the
big
girls
rolled
Nine-pin
down
on
donkey's
common,
And
on
seesaw
sunday
nights
I
wooed
Whoever
I
would
with
my
wicked
eyes,
The
whole
of
the
moon
I
could
love
and
leave
All
the
green
leaved
little
weddings'
wives
In
the
coal
black
bush
and
let
them
grieve.
When
I
was
a
gusty
man
and
a
half
And
the
black
beast
of
the
beetles'
pews
(Sighed
the
old
ram
rod,
dying
of
bitches),
Not
a
boy
and
a
bit
in
the
wick-
Dipping
moon
and
drunk
as
a
new
dropped
calf,
I
whistled
all
night
in
the
twisted
flues,
Midwives
grew
in
the
midnight
ditches,
And
the
sizzling
sheets
of
the
town
cried,
Quick!-
Whenever
I
dove
in
a
breast
high
shoal,
Wherever
I
ramped
in
the
clover
quilts,
Whatsoever
I
did
in
the
coal-
Black
night,
I
left
my
quivering
prints.
When
I
was
a
man
you
could
call
a
man
And
the
black
cross
of
the
holy
house,
(Sighed
the
old
ram
rod,
dying
of
welcome),
Brandy
and
ripe
in
my
bright,
bass
prime,
No
springtailed
tom
in
the
red
hot
town
With
every
simmering
woman
his
mouse
But
a
hillocky
bull
in
the
swelter
Of
summer
come
in
his
great
good
time
To
the
sultry,
biding
herds,
I
said,
Oh,
time
enough
when
the
blood
runs
cold,
And
I
lie
down
but
to
sleep
in
bed,
For
my
sulking,
skulking,
coal
black
soul!
When
I
was
half
the
man
I
was
And
serve
me
right
as
the
preachers
warn,
(Sighed
the
old
ram
rod,
dying
of
downfall),
No
flailing
calf
or
cat
in
a
flame
Or
hickory
bull
in
milky
grass
But
a
black
sheep
with
a
crumpled
horn,
At
last
the
soul
from
its
foul
mousehole
Slunk
pouting
out
when
the
limp
time
came;
And
I
gave
my
soul
a
blind,
slashed
eye,
Gristle
and
rind,
and
a
roarers'
life,
And
I
shoved
it
into
the
coal
black
sky
To
find
a
woman's
soul
for
a
wife.
Now
I
am
a
man
no
more
no
more
And
a
black
reward
for
a
roaring
life,
(Sighed
the
old
ram
rod,
dying
of
strangers),
Tidy
and
cursed
in
my
dove
cooed
room
I
lie
down
thin
and
hear
the
good
bells
jaw--
For,
oh,
my
soul
found
a
sunday
wife
In
the
coal
black
sky
and
she
bore
angels!
Harpies
around
me
out
of
her
womb!
Chastity
prays
for
me,
piety
sings,
Innocence
sweetens
my
last
black
breath,
Modesty
hides
my
thighs
in
her
wings,
And
all
the
deadly
virtues
plague
my
death!
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