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    Collected Poems (1958-2015)

    Page 23
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      That drove the ships of old, they crashed and burned

      Or fed the fishes when they overturned.

      The Portuguese, the Spaniards and the Dutch,

      And all the times the English almost made

      A landfall on our land-mass – it’s too much

      Drowning to think about, a sad parade

      That leaves you with a throat too dry to clutch,

      Sensing the flesh dissolved, and bone decayed –

      But really we should shift our starting date

      To further in the past. It’s far too late

      The way it is, and serves the fond idea

      The cloudland of our gentle indigenes

      Was wrecked when we decided to come here

      To exercise our new-found ways and means:

      Just name the day and Lo! We would appear

      Out of the surf like Hollywood marines

      Sprinting ashore in roughly half the time

      It takes to find a rhyme or plan a crime.

      But it took centuries for men to find

      The means of even failing on the waves;

      It took the murderous patterns in the mind

      That made a mockery of Jesus Saves;

      Above all it took industry, the kind

      That limes the sea lanes with a million graves.

      The quick did not usurp the slow, the quick

      Had just grown slightly slower to get sick.

      Visit the flight deck? Asked, I always do

      Not just because the toy trains never die

      As thrill-providers, but because it’s true

      That how we sailed is still there when we fly,

      In the controls. All that Magellan knew

      Is in those panels, carried eight miles high

      By turbo-fans whose climb to power began

      With just the wind, and just the mind of man.

      How unimaginable the past seems

      When read about in detail! All that pain

      With little gained or even less, the schemes

      To get rich quick turned rotten by the rain –

      Or ruined by the lack of it. All dreams:

      Except the few that worked gave us this plane

      We fly in now, our voyage just begun –

      To catch the giant sling swung by the sun.

      The Buzz

      Grown old, you long still for what young love does.

      It gives the world a liquid light injection,

      A sun bath even in the night. The buzz

      Blurs brain-cells by infecting everything

      With lust. A girl bright as an egret’s wing

      Will cleave unto an oaf and see perfection,

      And as for him, don’t ask. He thinks her thighs

      Open on heaven and his hands have eyes.

      Time will sort all that out, but what a loss!

      Sweet reason is our name for sour reflection,

      The pause for thought that kills the fairy floss.

      With luck, there will be two of you to trade

      Tales of the star-burst that could never fade,

      But did, and give a voice to introspection:

      Which is love too, though not quite the young kind

      We comfort ourselves now by calling blind.

      But there is nothing young love fails to see

      Except the future. Bodies and their connection

      Are all creation, shorn of history.

      These are the only humans who exist.

      Whoever thought to kiss or to be kissed

      Or hit the sack from every known direction

      Except them? Visions radiantly true

      Don’t change with age. Those that have had them do.

      Dreams Before Sleeping

      The idea is to set the mind adrift

      And sleep comes. Mozart, exquisitely dressed,

      Walks carefully to work between soft piles

      Of fresh horse-dung. Nice work. Why was my gift –

      It’s sixty years now and I’m still obsessed –

      Hidden behind the tree? I cried for miles.

      No one could find it. Find the tiger’s face.

      It’s in the tree: i.e. the strangest place.

      But gifts were presents then. In fact, for short,

      We called them pressies, which was just as long,

      But sounded better. Mallarmé thought “night”

      A stronger word than nuit. Nice word. The fort

      Defied the tide but faded like a song

      When the wave’s edge embraced it at last light.

      Which song? Time, time, it is the strangest thing.

      The Waves. The Sea, the Sea. Awake and Sing.

      Wrong emphasis, for music leads to sex.

      Your young man must be stroking you awake

      Somewhere about now, in another time.

      Strange thing. Range Rover. Ducks de Luxe. Lex rex.

      The cherry blossoms fall into the lake.

      The carp cruise undisturbed. Lemon and lime

      And bitters is a drink for drinkers. Just.

      I who was iron burn in silence. Rust.

      What would you do to please me, were you here?

      The tarte Tatin is melting the ice cream.

      One sip would murder sleep, but so does this.

      Left to itself, the raft floats nowhere near

      Oblivion, or even a real dream.

      Strange word, nice question. Real? Real as a kiss,

      Which never lasts, but proves we didn’t waste

      The time we spent in longing for its taste.

      Seek sleep and lose it. Fight it and it comes.

      I knew that, but it’s too late now. The bird

      Sings with its wings. The turtle storms ashore.

      Pigs fly. Would that translate to talking drums?

      Nice if they didn’t understand a word

      Each other said, but drowned in metaphor –

      As we do when we search within, and find

      Mere traces of the peace we had in mind.

      Forget about it. Just get up and write.

      But when you try to catch that cavalcade,

      Too much coherence muscles in. Nice thought.

      Let’s hear it, heartbreak. Happiness writes white.

      Be grateful for the bed of nails you made

      And now must lie in, trading, as you ought,

      Sleep for the pictures that will leave you keen

      To draft a memo about what they mean.

      You will grow weary doing so. Your eyes

      Are fighting to stay open. When they fail

      You barely make it back to where you lay.

      What do you see? Little to memorise.

      A lawn shines green again through melting hail.

      Deep in its tree, a tiger turns away.

      Nice try, but it was doomed, that strange request

      To gaze into the furnace and find rest.

      Incident in the Gandhi Bookshop Café,

      Avenida Corrientes

      They were all dying for her,

      But they died bravely, they died well.

      It was well done.

      I was proud to join them.

      We all went over the waterfall together.

      We fell together.

      The world fell together.

      For a sacred moment it was all one,

      And then she was gone.

      Briefly she had sat there

      Making notes to mark her progress

      Through the labyrinths of Borges –

      Something in her manner

      Discouraged offers of help –

      And then she looked at her watch.

      Did she have a lover somewhere

      Or perhaps a tango class?

      Imagine being the maestro

      Against whom she leans

      In a tensile puente.

      Deep breasted, long legged,

      Silk skinned,

      She was the kind of beauty

      Who makes every poet

      Wish he were a painter,


      So as to say:

      “Take off your clothes:

      I need the essence of you.”

      Old poets who try that

      Get themselves arrested,

      Whereas painters never fail,

      Until the day they drop,

      To score with the girl of fine family

      And the perfect behind.

      Having paid her bill,

      She stood up and was swept away

      On a wave of sighs

      As we all shared the light in our eyes,

      Our hearts bleeding,

      Before going back to the books

      We were writing and reading –

      Back to the usual macho shit

      Which is all there is

      When you get down to it,

      Out of the cloud

      Into which the angel

      Disappears,

      Having blessed us once

      With the holy presence

      Of her good looks:

      Eternity compressed

      Into one sweet minute.

      She was out of this world

      And we are in it.

      Now we must begin again.

      Poor us. Poor men.

      The waterfall:

      It was our tears.

      The Falcon Growing Old

      The falcon wears its erudition lightly

      As it angles down towards its master’s glove.

      Student of thermals written by the desert,

      It scarcely moves a muscle as it rides

      A silent avalanche back to the wrist

      Where it will stand in wait like a hooded hostage.

      A lifetime’s learning renders youthful effort

      Less necessary, which is fortunate.

      The chase and first-strike kill it once could wing

      Have grown beyond it, so some morning soon

      This bird will have its neck wrung without warning

      And one of its progeny will take its place.

      Thinking these things, the ageing writer makes

      Sketches for poems, notes for paragraphs.

      Bound for the darkness, does he see himself

      Balanced and forceful like the poised assassin

      Whose mere trajectory attracts all eyes

      Except the victim’s? Habit can die hard,

      But still the chance remains he simply likes it,

      Catching the shifting air the way a falcon

      Spreads on a secret wave, the outpaced earth

      Left looking powerless. This sentence here,

      Weighed down by literal meaning as it is,

      Might only need that loose clause to take off,

      Air-launched from a position in the sky

      For a long glide with just its wing-tip feathers

      Correcting for the wobble in the lisp

      Of sliding nothingness, the whispering road

      That leads you to a dead-heat with your shadow

      At the orange-blossom trellis in the oasis.

      Vertical Envelopment

      Taking the piss out of my catheter,

      The near-full plastic bag bulks on my calf

      As I drag my I.V. tower through Addenbrooke’s

      Like an Airborne soldier heading for D-Day

      Down the longest corridor in England.

      Each man his own mule. Look at all this stuff.

      Pipes, tubes, air bottles. Some of us have wheels.

      Humping our gear, we’re bare-arsed warriors

      Dressed to strike fear into the enemy,

      But someone fires a flare. Mission aborted.

      On the airfield, the chattering Dakotas

      Have fallen silent. Jump postponed again.

      Stay as you are. Keep your equipment on.

      When cloud and wind are OK in the drop zone

      We hit the sky and leap into the dark.

      Meanwhile just hunker down and get some sleep.

      Look on the bright side. Everyone’s still here.

      The longest corridor is full of us,

      Men of the Airborne going back to bed

      For just one more drawn-out Walpurgisnacht.

      Our urinary tracts hung up to drain

      Throw amber highlights on the bare white wall

      Until another dawn. The sky looks clear.

      Dakotas cough when they start up, repeat

      Themselves like women gossiping. But wait,

      Where are the women? What do they go through?

      They fly there by Lysander and get caught

      Like Violette Szabo. Out there on their own.

      Best not to think of it, stick with the guys

      And shoot the bull about your CLL

      Leukaemia that might hold off for years,

      The hacking rattle of COPD

      Which sounds as if it might star Dennis Franz

      As Andy Sipowicz, but it turns out

      To be the bug they once called emphysema.

      The way I smoked, thank Christ it wasn’t cancer:

      I caught one break at least. It’s dawn again.

      The sky looks clear. The kit bag full of piss

      Is heavy on your leg. Your name-tags itch,

      The cannula inside your elbow dangles,

      The patches for electrodes decorate

      Your chest like Nicorettes. When you go down

      Into the dark you’ll see it sliced with flak

      Just as the bumping CAT Scan bangs and crackles,

      As the MRI inscribes the night with fire.

      My outfit one by one in the green light,

      Out of the door and down into the dark

      They go, and not much later in the year

      I’m watching Peter jump. The flak comes up

      And pulls him in. But no green light for me.

      I’m home in the Dakota and the same

      Long corridor leads back to bed. More stuff

      To hump: omeprazole and doxycycline

      Pills for my lungs. The medics give me leave

      To be there for my daughter’s New York show.

      I step ashore and wake up in Mount Sinai,

      Felled by the blood clot I brought off the boat.

      For ten full days and nights I lie and watch

      The Gulf spill oil on CNN, which is

      An oil-spill anyway, and back in England

      I add syringes to my weaponry.

      Bruises from Clexane like Kandinsky abstracts

      Blotch me with blue and yellow and bright pink,

      A waistline from the Lenbach Haus in Munich.

      The women of my family watch the clock

      To make sure I shoot up at the right time:

      All in the timing and a simple plan.

      Normandy showed, and Arnhem showed again,

      The Airborne tactic was a death-trap. Crete

      Fell to the German sky troops but their losses

      Were too great and they never jumped again.

      At Cassino and in the Hürtgen Forest

      The Fallschirmjäger were brought in by truck.

      Up in the air like white blooms on a pond

      We’re asking for it. Borneo was waiting

      For the Aussies to jump into if the Yanks

      Held back the bomb. The jump postponed,

      You see them now in the long corridor,

      My countrymen, their incipient melanomas

      Cut out and sewn up, scars like bullet holes.

      You want to see mine? In the final hours

      At Dien Bien Phu fresh paratroops went in

      Through tracer veils as if about to land

      Slap in the middle of SS Das Reich.

      They’re here again. They must have been patched up:

      Not one less handsome than Alain Delon

      In Purple Noon, but barely half his age.

      The Hitch is with them and I hear him speak

      Exactly as he looked the day we met:

      The automatic flak came bubbling up

      Like champers, dear boy. Overrated stuff.

      I watch him standing there in the
    green light.

      It switches off. Has he come home with us?

      I can’t see. I just see the corridor

      And my white room. Another night alive

      To lie awake and rue the blasphemy

      By which I take their deaths as mine, the young

      Soldiers of long ago, in the first years

      Of my full span, who went down through the dark

      With no lives to look back on. Their poor mothers.

      Where are the women? Nurse, my bag is broken.

      Sorry, it’s everywhere. She mops, I cough,

      She brings the nebulizer and I sit

      Exhaling fog. Dakotas starting up

      Make whirlpools in the ground mist. Too much luck,

      Just to have lived so long when I unfold

      And shuffle forward to go out and down

      The steep, dark, helter-skelter laundry chute

      Into that swamp of blinking crocodiles

      Men call Shit Creek. Come, let us kiss and part.

      Book Review

      Dante Alighieri: Monarchia

      Edited by Prue Shaw for the Società Dantesca Italiana, 2009

      More valuable than all of mine, your book

      Is neatly kept like everything you do:

      So clearly worth the twenty years it took,

      It sparkles. Fonts well chosen, margins true,

      Its every creamy page exhales the sense

      Of learned judgment, tact and permanence.

      If Dante waited seven centuries

      To see his Latin tract receive such care

      He can’t complain, though being hard to please

      No doubt he did while he was lying there

      Still exiled in Ravenna, still annoyed

      That so much effort has to be employed

      In re-establishing what he first wrote.

      But what could he expect? He worked by hand,

      And other hands, on skins of sheep and goat,

      Made copies, and those went to every land

      In Europe, and were copied once again,

      And soon for every error there were ten.

      Tracing the manuscripts back to the first

      Few spin-offs is as good as you can get.

      Often you don’t get that, and at the worst

      A copy’s copy’s copy’s the best bet,

      And so the scholar must compare, contrast,

      And from the past deduce a deeper past.

      It takes far more than sweat. It takes a mind

      That can connect with the great poet’s heart,

     


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