It is apparent from this poem that D.H.Lawrence didn’t much like bats, but that didn’t stop him from doing a virtuoso job of portraying them in this poem from his collection ‘Birds, Beasts and Flowers’. How well that image of ‘a black glove thrown up at the light,/And falling back’ captures their elastic flight.
Personally I have always been a bit of a chiropterophile. As a small child I liked to go into the field at the bottom of our garden and watch them at dusk in summer, hawking for insects in the warm air, both bats and insects being far more abundant back then. In those days I could hear them too, an eery thin piping from above. And I shall never forget an evening down in Wales when my son took us to Stackpole Field Centre near his home in Pembrokeshire to watch the bats come out at dusk. It seems that up in the roof under its archway was and maybe still is the main summer roost for about four hundred greater horseshoe bats: they spend the winter in limestone caves on the coast, move to Carew Castle in the spring and then come here. Each evening they stream out from the roost and set off across country on their nocturnal hunt for insects, which can take them as far as north Pembrokeshire. It was certainly an amazing spectacle: I had seen perhaps a dozen bats together before but never anything like this. At first there were only three or four, fluttering below the archway like great black butterflies in the twilight, but then more and more appeared and the butterflies turned to a swirling blizzard of black snowflakes. We sat on the grass near the hedge that served as their flight-path, and one by one they flickered past, a scrambled squadron of small jet fighters, yet more agile than any plane, detecting us at the last second as they rounded the hedge and passed over and round us with an effortless swerve: I thought of the play of Sergeant Troy’s sword round Bathsheba in ‘Far From The Madding Crowd’.
But over to Lawrence and his masterful imagery…
Bat
At evening, sitting on this terrace,
When the sun from the west, beyond Pisa, beyond the mountains of Carrara
Departs, and the world is taken by surprise …
When the tired flower of Florence is in gloom beneath the glowing
Brown hills surrounding …
When under the arches of the Ponte Vecchio
A green light enters against stream, flush from the west,
Against the current of obscure Arno …
Look up, and you see things flying
Between the day and the night;
Swallows with spools of dark thread sewing the shadows together.
A circle swoop, and a quick parabola under the bridge arches
Where light pushes through;
A sudden turning upon itself of a thing in the air.
A dip to the water.
And you think:
’The swallows are flying so late!’
Swallows?
Dark air-life looping
Yet missing the pure loop …
A twitch, a twitter, an elastic shudder in flight
And serrated wings against the sky,
Like a glove, a black glove thrown up at the light,
And falling back.
Never swallows!
Bats!
The swallows are gone.
At a wavering instant the swallows gave way to bats
By the Ponte Vecchio …
Changing guard.
Bats, and an uneasy creeping in one’s scalp
As the bats swoop overhead!
Flying madly.
Pipistrello!
Black piper on an infinitesimal pipe.
Little lumps that fly in air and have voices indefinite, wildly vindictive;
Wings like bits of umbrella.
Bats!
Creatures that hang themselves up like an old rag, to sleep;
And disgustingly upside down.
Hanging upside down like rows of disgusting old rags
And grinning in their sleep.
Bats!
In China the bat is symbol for happiness.
Not for me!
D.H.Lawrence