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    Sentenced to Life


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      to Prue

      If you’re the dreamer, I’m your dream, but when

      You wish to wake I am your wish, and grow

      As mighty as all mastery, and then

      As silent as a star

      Ablaze above the city that we know

      As Time: so very strange, so very far.

      Contents

      Sentenced to Life

      Driftwood Houses

      Landfall

      Early to Bed

      My Home

      Holding Court

      Procedure for Disposal

      Manly Ferry

      Tempe Dump

      Living Doll

      Event Horizon

      Nature Programme

      Managing Anger

      Echo Point

      Too Much Light

      My Latest Fever

      The Emperor’s Last Words

      Compendium Catullianum

      Bugsy Siegel’s Flying Eye

      Only the Immortal Need Apply

      Plot Points

      One Elephant, Two Elephant

      Asma Unpacks Her Pretty Clothes

      Nina Kogan’s Geometrical Heaven

      Star System

      Change of Domicile

      Rounded with a Sleep

      Elementary Sonnet

      Leçons de ténèbres

      Winter Plums

      Spring Snow Dancer

      Mysterious Arrival of the Dew

      Cabin Baggage

      Transit Visa

      Japanese Maple

      Balcony Scene

      Sunset Hails a Rising

      A Note on the Text

      Sentenced to Life

      Sentenced to life, I sleep face-up as though

      Ice-bound, lest I should cough the night away,

      And when I walk the mile to town, I show

      The right technique for wading through deep clay.

      A sad man, sorrier than he can say.

      But surely not so guilty he should die

      Each day from knowing that his race is run:

      My sin was to be faithless. I would lie

      As if I could be true to everyone

      At once, and all the damage that was done

      Was in the name of love, or so I thought.

      I might have met my death believing this,

      But no, there was a lesson to be taught.

      Now, not just old, but ill, with much amiss,

      I see things with a whole new emphasis.

      My daughter’s garden has a goldfish pool

      With six fish, each a little finger long.

      I stand and watch them following their rule

      Of never touching, never going wrong:

      Trajectories as perfect as plain song.

      Once, I would not have noticed; nor have known

      The name for Japanese anemones,

      So pale, so frail. But now I catch the tone

      Of leaves. No birds can touch down in the trees

      Without my seeing them. I count the bees.

      Even my memories are clearly seen:

      Whence comes the answer if I’m told I must

      Be aching for my homeland. Had I been

      Dulled in the brain to match my lungs of dust

      There’d be no recollection I could trust.

      Yet I, despite my guilt, despite my grief,

      Watch the Pacific sunset, heaven sent,

      In glowing colours and in sharp relief,

      Painting the white clouds when the day is spent,

      As if it were my will and testament –

      As if my first impressions were my last,

      And time had only made them more defined,

      Now I am weak. The sky is overcast

      Here in the English autumn, but my mind

      Basks in the light I never left behind.

      Driftwood Houses

      The ne plus ultra of our lying down,

      Skeleton riders see the planet peeled

      Into their helmets by a knife of light.

      Just so, I stare into the racing field

      Of ice as I lie on my side and fight

      To cough up muck. This bumpy slide downhill

      Leads from my bed to where I’m bound to drown

      At this rate. I get up and take a walk,

      Lean on the balustrade and breathe my fill

      At last. The wooden stairs down to the hall

      Stop shaking. Enough said. To hear me talk

      You’d think I found my fate sad. Hardly that:

      All that has happened is I’ve hit the wall.

      Disintegration is appropriate,

      As once, on our French beach, I built, each year,

      Among the rocks below the esplanade,

      Houses from driftwood for our girls to roof

      With towels so they could hide there in the shade

      With ice creams that would melt more slowly. Proof

      That nothing built can be forever here

      Lay in the way those frail and crooked frames

      Were undone by a storm-enhanced high tide

      And vanished. It was time, and anyhow

      Our daughters were not short of other games

      Which were all theirs, and not geared to my pride.

      And here they come. They’re gathering shells again.

      And you in your straw hat, I see you now,

      As I lie restless yet most blessed of men.

      Landfall

      Hard to believe, now, that I once was free

      From pills in heaps, blood tests, X-rays and scans.

      No pipes or tubes. At perfect liberty,

      I stained my diary with travel plans.

      The ticket paid for at the other end,

      I packed a hold-all and went anywhere

      They asked me. One on whom you could depend

      To show up, I would cross the world by air

      And come down neatly in some crowded hall.

      I stood fora full hour to give my spiel.

      Here, I might talk back to a nuisance call,

      And that’s my flight of eloquence. Unreal:

      But those years in the clear, how real were they,

      When all the sirens in the signing queue

      Who clutched their hearts at what I had to say

      Were just dreams, even when the dream came true?

      I called it health but never stopped to think

      It might have been a kind of weightlessness,

      That footloose feeling always on the brink

      Of breakdown: the false freedom of excess.

      Rarely at home in those days, I’m home now,

      Where few will look at me with shining eyes.

      Perhaps none ever did, and that was how

      The fantasy of young strength that now dies

      Expressed itself. The face that smiled at mine

      Out of the looking glass was seeing things.

      Today I am restored by my decline

      And by the harsh awakening it brings.

      I was born weak and always have been weak.

      I came home and was taken into care.

      A cot-case, but at long last I can speak:

      I am here now, who was hardly even there.

      Early to Bed

      Old age is not my problem. Bad health, yes.

      If I were well again, I’d walk for miles,

      My name a synonym for tirelessness.

      On Friday nights I’d go out on the tiles:

      I’d go to tango joints and stand up straight

      While women leaned against me trustingly,

      I’d push them backward at a stately rate

      With steps of eloquence and intricacy.

      Alone in the café, my favourite place,

      I’d sit up late to carve a verse like this.

      I couldn’t do it at
    my usual pace

      But weight of manner would add emphasis.

      The grand old man. Do I dare play that part?

      Perhaps I am too frail. I don’t know how

      To say exactly what is in my heart,

      Except I feel that I am nowhere now.

      But I have tempted providence too long:

      It gives me life enough, and little pain.

      I should be grateful for this simple song,

      No matter how it goes against the grain

      To spend the best part of a winter’s day

      Filing away at some reluctant rhyme

      And go to bed with so much still to say

      On how I came to have so little time.

      My Home

      Grasping at straws, I bless another day

      Of having felt not much less than all right.

      I wrote a paragraph and put some more

      Books in a box for books to throw away.

      Such were my deeds. Now, short of breath and sore

      From all that effort, I prepare for night,

      Which occupies the windows as I climb

      The stairs. A step up and I stand, each time,

      Posed like the statue of a man in pain,

      Although I’m really not: just weak and slow.

      This is the measure of my dying years:

      The sad skirl of a piper in the rain

      Who plays ‘My Home’. If I seem close to tears

      It’s for my sins, not sickness. Soon the snow

      Will finish readying the ground for spring.

      The cold, if not the warmth that it will bring,

      Is made, each day, so clearly manifest

      I thank my lucky stars for second sight.

      The children of our street head off for school

      Most mornings, stronger for their hours of rest.

      Plump in their coloured coats they prove a rule

      By moving brilliantly through soft white light:

      We fade away, but vivid in our eyes

      A world is born again that never dies.

      Holding Court

      Retreating from the world, all I can do

      Is build a new world, one demanding less

      Acute assessments. Too deaf to keep pace

      With conversation, I don’t try to guess

      At meanings, or unpack a stroke of wit,

      But just send silent signals with my face

      That claim I’ve not succumbed to loneliness

      And might be ready to come in on cue.

      People still turn towards me where I sit.

      I used to notice everything, and spoke

      A language full of details that I’d seen,

      And people were amused; but now I see

      Only a little way. What can they mean,

      My phrases? They come drifting like the mist

      I look through if someone appears to be

      Smiling in my direction. Have they been?

      This was the time when I most liked to smoke.

      My watch-band feels too loose around my wrist.

      My body, sensitive in every way

      Save one, can still proceed from chair to chair,

      But in my mind the fires are dying fast.

      Breathe through a scarf. Steer clear of the cold air.

      Think less of love and all that you have lost.

      You have no future so forget the past.

      Let this be no occasion for despair.

      Cherish the prison of your waning day.

      Remember liberty, and what it cost.

      Be pleased that things are simple now, at least,

      As certitude succeeds bewilderment.

      The storm blew out and this is the dead calm.

      The pain is going where the passion went.

      Few things will move you now to lose your head

      And you can cause, or be caused, little harm.

      Tonight you leave your audience content:

      You were the ghost they wanted at the feast,

      Though none of them recalls a word you said.

      Procedure for Disposal

      It may not come to this, but if I should

      Fail to survive this year of feebleness

      Which irks me so and may have killed for good

      Whatever gift I had for quick success –

      For I could talk an hour alone on stage

      And mostly make it up along the way,

      But now when I compose a single page

      Of double-spaced it takes me half the day –

      If I, that is, should finally succumb

      To these infirmities I’m slow to learn

      The names of lest my brain be rendered numb

      With boredom even as I toss and turn,

      Then send my ashes home, where they can fall

      In their own sweet time from the harbour wall.

      Manly Ferry

      Too frail to fly, I may not see again

      The harbour that I crossed on the South Steyne

      When I was still in short pants. All the boys

      Would gather at the rail that ran around

      The open engine-room. The oil, the noise

      Of rocking beams and plunging rods: it beat

      Even the view out from the hurdling deck

      Into the ocean. The machinery

      Was so alive, so beautiful, so neat.

      Years later the old ferries disappeared,

      Except for the South Steyne, which looked intact

      Where she was parked at Pyrmont, though a fire

      Had gutted her. I loved her two-faced grace:

      Twin funnels, and each end of her a prow,

      She sailed into a mirror and back out,

      Even while dead inside and standing still:

      Her livery of green and gold wore well

      Through years of weather as she went nowhere

      Except on that long voyage in my mind

      Where complicated workings clicked and throbbed

      And everything moved forward at full strength.

      And then, while I was elsewhere, she was gone:

      And now I, too, await my vanishing,

      Which, unlike hers, will be for good. She went

      Away to be refitted. In her new

      Career as a floating restaurant

      She seems set for as long as oysters grow

      With chilled white Cloudy Bay to wash them down:

      A brilliant inner city ornament.

      But is it better to be always there

      Than out of it, and just a fading name?

      For me, her life was when the engine turned.

      Soon now my path across the swell will end.

      If I can’t work, let me be broken up.

      Tempe Dump

      I always thought the showdown would be sudden,

      Convulsive as a bushfire triple-jumping

      A roadway where some idiot Green council

      Had forbidden the felling of gum trees,

      And so, with no firebreaks to check its course,

      The fire rides on like the army of Attila

      To look for houses where the English Garden

      Is banned, and there is only the Australian garden,

      With eucalypts that overhang the eaves

      And shed bark to ensure the racing flames

      Will send the place up like a napalm strike.

      Instead, it’s Tempe Dump. When we were small

      My gang went there exploring. Piston rings

      Lay round in heaps, shiny among the junk

      Which didn’t shine at all, just gave forth wisps

      Of smoke. The dump was smouldering underneath

      But had no end in view. This is the fire

      Within me, though I harbour noble thoughts

      Of forests under phosphorous attack

      And in an hour left black, in fields of ash –

      Not this long meltdown with its leaking heat,

      Its drips of acid, pools of alkali:

      This slow burn of what should be finished with


      But waits for the clean sweep that never comes.

      Living Doll

      An Aufstehpuppe is a stand-up guy.

      You knock him over, he gets up again:

      Constantly smiling, never asking why

      The world went sideways for a while back then.

      I have an Aufstehpuppe on the shelf

      Under the mirror in my living room:

      I wish I were reminded of myself

      Merrily dipping in and out of doom.

      The truth, alas, is I’ve been knocked askew

      For quite a while now and I can’t get back

      To find the easy balance I once knew.

      Until the day when everything goes black

      I’ll spend more time than he does on my side

      Wishing the sparkle of his painted eyes

      Was shared by mine. I envy him his pride:

      That simple strength he seems to realise.

      My Aufstehpuppe was a crude antique

      When first I met him. Soon he might descend

      Further into our family, there to speak

      Of how we are defeated in the end,

      But still begin again in the new lives

      Which sort our junk, deciding what to keep.

      Let them keep this, a cheap doll that contrives

      To stand straight even as I fall asleep.

      Event Horizon

      For years we fooled ourselves. Now we can tell

      How everyone our age heads for the brink

      Where they are drawn into the unplumbed well,

      Not to be seen again. How sad, to think

      People we once loved will be with us there

      And we not touch them, for it is nowhere.

      Never to taste again her pretty mouth!

      It’s been forever, though, since last we kissed.

      Shadows evaporate as they go south,

      Torn, by whatever longings still persist,

      Into a tattered wisp, a streak of air,

      And then not even that. They get nowhere.

      But once inside, you will have no regrets.

      You go where no one will remember you.

      You go below the sun when the sun sets,

      And there is nobody you ever knew

      Still visible, nor even the most rare

      Hint of a face to humanise nowhere.

      Are you to welcome this? It welcomes you.

      The only blessing of the void to come

      Is that you can relax. Nothing to do,

      No cruel dreams of subtracting from your sum

      Of follies. About those, at last, you care:

      But soon you need not, as you go nowhere.

     


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