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    Sentenced to Life

    Page 3
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      Attacking out of retreat at Sidhi Barani,

      But no, he stayed modestly in the background

      While our cameraman, intrepid as all get out

      Knocked off the required footage of lions and tigers

      And cheetahs licking their lips, with even a glimpse of leopard,

      Considered unfindable save by Denis’s sidekick

      Kungu, who muttered comments in Swahili

      Which Denis translated as ‘Leopard over there, I think.’

      And there she was, a set of spots deep in a tree-clump

      Stuck to the spot with her spots resolutely unchanging

      For the full two hours till she finally took a crap.

      ‘A bowel movement, but at least she moved’ jested Denis

      Who had a million of them.

      So it went on:

      Good usable stuff up till the day we rested

      The crew, as the union dictates. Thank God for those rules

      Or there would be crosses all over the Masai Mara

      To mark the death by exhaustion of the modern impi,

      The tough men in sleeveless bush shirts

      With the tricep tattoos and a camera on their shoulder

      That you and I could barely pick up. Our chap was Mike:

      ‘We’re doing OK so far but nothing fantastic,

      So if you two see anything don’t for Christ’s sake tell me.’

      Denis thought that an off-piste mini-safari

      With me up front while Kungu taught me Swahili

      And him in the back at ease like Diana Dors

      In a Daimler (his showbiz images tended to be

      A bit out of date, though it’s never wise to argue

      With a man who actually knew Ava Gardner),

      A trip to show me a few unscripted attractions

      That often won’t sit still for a movie camera,

      Would be a good thing. He was like a book collector

      Showing you his library. I could tell from how he spoke

      He was Africa mad, so he had his favourite locations

      For shooting stills, like a ford five miles away

      Of bumpy driving, nothing too bad, he promised.

      And pretty, even if nothing happened. Well he

      Was right, it was pretty. Just wrong about the nothing.

      We stood on the inner bank of a curve in the river

      And I had to take it on trust that under the surface

      Was a shallow stretch the bigger beasts could walk on.

      ‘Elephant,’ he said ‘quite often cross here.

      You see whole families of them at a time.’

      As if on cue, three elephant, four elephant,

      An entire family showed up out of the bush

      Which guarded the other side like a crescent moon

      And assembled on the bank. ‘Well, there you are’

      Laughed Denis. ‘Your luck’s uncanny. Straight from the movies.

      No wonder Kungu wants to touch you so often.’

      But even as he spoke, there were lots more of them,

      So the first ones had to move, like shunted box cars,

      Into the oxtail water. More than thirty

      Were now in the frame, except we had no frame;

      But Denis’s Nikon made a rare appearance.

      ‘Well, Kungu can pick them. This is all your doing.

      I’ve never seen this, never in all my time

      In Africa. And neither has he.’

      And Kungu was speaking:

      In between the air-horn blasts from a New York gridlock

      With half of downtown occupied by Mack ten-wheelers

      I caught a few mentions of tembo, meaning elephant,

      But the other words were double Dutch to me.

      ‘He hasn’t seen this since he was a boy.’

      And there were more to come, but by now the Kombis

      Of all the tourist firms were gathering

      At the point where the first family were now emerging

      To climb the bank on the side near us.

      A lane was left

      To let the elephant by, but the flashing lights

      On the cameras must have seemed a storm. One tusker

      Flared out its ears and bellowed. ‘By Christ’

      Said Denis ‘If this one charges, they all will.’

      They didn’t charge, but there was a bit of a panic,

      And that was scary enough. I know I sound

      Like Falstaff telling Hal how many thieves

      He put to flight, but really there were fifty

      Elephant tightly packed and churning around

      To take their turn at scrambling from the soup.

      In the river, the tots beside their mothers

      Were near invisible, their little trunks

      Held up like snorkels.

      Open mouthed

      (Like the Three Stooges, Denis later said,

      Bang up to date as usual. Thanks a bunch.)

      We watched one hip-deep mother tuck her trunk beneath

      Her pup and hoik him out, swing like a crane

      And put him on the bank. And guess who didn’t

      Get the shot. ‘Oh blast!’ said Denis, fiddling

      With the switches that had changed his life.

      Kungu

      Was of the opinion that the magic touch

      Was mine, but he was also the first one –

      As we bumped slowly home across the veldt –

      To say what needed saying. Denis said

      ‘He says we have to keep our day a secret.’

      I dumbly added ‘Especially from my crew.’

      ‘That’s who he meant,’ said Denis. Pale pink light

      Was growing deeper in the sky

      When we got back to camp. Cameraman Mike

      Said ‘Anything good happen?’ From the way

      We said it hadn’t he soon guessed that it had

      But kept shtum for our young producer’s sake,

      And anyway next day we filmed two leopard.

      Asma Unpacks Her Pretty Clothes

      Wherever her main residence is now,

      Asma unpacks her pretty clothes.

      It takes forever: so much silk and cashmere

      To be unpeeled from clinging leaves of tissue

      By her ladies. With her perfect hands, she helps.

      Out there in Syria, the torturers

      Arrive by bus at every change of shift

      While victims dangle from their cracking wrists.

      Beaten with iron bars, young people pray

      To die soon. This is the middle ages

      Brought back to living death. Her husband’s doing,

      The screams will never reach her where she is.

      Asma’s uncovered hair had promised progress

      For all her nation’s women. They believed her.

      We who looked on believed the promise too,

      But now, as she unpacks her pretty clothes,

      The dream at home dissolves in agony.

      Bashar, her husband, does as he sees fit

      To cripple every enemy with pain.

      We sort of knew, but he had seemed so modern

      With Asma alongside him. His big talk

      About destroying Israel: standard stuff.

      A culture-changing wife offset all that.

      She did, she did. I doted as Vogue did

      On her sheer style. Dear God, it fooled me too,

      So now my blood is curdled by the shrieks

      Of people mad with grief. My own wrists hurt

      As Asma, with her lustrous fingertips –

      She must have thought such things could never happen –

      Unpacks her pretty clothes.

      Nina Kogan’s Geometrical Heaven

      Two of her little pictures grace my walls:

      Suprematism in a special sense,

      With all the usual bits and pieces flying

      Through space, but carrying a pastel-tinged

      Delicacy to lighten the strict forms

    &nb
    sp; Of that hard school and blow them all sky-high,

      Splinters and stoppers from the bombing of

      An angel’s boudoir. When Malevich told

      His pupils that their personalities

      Should be suppressed, the maestro little knew

      The state would soon require exactly that.

      But Nina, trying as she might, could not

      Rein in her individuality,

      And so she made these things that I own now

      And gaze at, wondering at her sad fate.

      She could have got away, but wished instead

      Her gift devoted to Utopia.

      She painted trams, designed official posters:

      Alive until the siege of Leningrad

      And then gone. Given any luck, she starved:

      But the purges were still rolling, and I fear

      The NKVD had her on a list,

      And what she faced, there at the very end,

      Was the white cold. Were there an afterlife,

      We might meet up, and I could tell her then

      Her sumptuous fragments still went flying on

      In my last hours, when I, in a warm house,

      Lay on my couch to watch them coming close,

      Her proofs that any vision of eternity

      Is with us in the world, and beautiful

      Because a mind has found the way things fit

      Purely by touch. That being said, however,

      I should record that out of any five

      Pictures by Kogan, at least six are fakes.

      Star System

      The stars in their magnificent array

      Look down upon the Earth, their cynosure,

      Or so it seems. They are too far away,

      In fact, to see a thing; hence they look pure

      To us. They lack the textures of our globe,

      So only we, from cameras carried high,

      Enjoy the beauty of the swirling robe

      That wraps us up, the interplay of sky

      And cloud, as if a Wedgwood plate of blue

      And white should melt, and then, its surface stirred

      With spoons, a treasure too good to be true,

      Be placed, and hover like a hummingbird,

      Drawing all eyes, though ours alone, to feast

      On splendour as it turns west from the east.

      There was a time when some of our young men

      Walked plumply on the moon and saw Earth rise,

      As stunning as the sun. The years since then

      Have aged them. Now and then somebody dies.

      It’s like a clock, for those of us who saw

      The Saturn rockets going up as if

      Mankind had energy to burn. The law

      Is different for one man. Time is a cliff

      You come to in the dark. Though you might fall

      As easily as on a feather bed,

      It is a sad farewell. You loved it all.

      You dream that you might keep it in your head.

      But memories, where can you take them to?

      Take one last look at them. They end with you.

      And still the Earth revolves, and still the blaze

      Of stars maintains a show of vigilance.

      It should, for long ago, in olden days,

      We came from there. By luck, by fate, by chance,

      All of the elements that form the world

      Were sent by cataclysms deep in space,

      And from their combination life unfurled

      And stood up straight, and wore a human face.

      I still can’t pass a mirror. Like a boy,

      I check my looks, and now I see the shell

      Of what I was. So why, then, this strange joy?

      Perhaps an old man dying would do well

      To smile as he rejoins the cosmic dust

      Life comes from, for resign himself he must.

      Change of Domicile

      Installed in my last house, I face the thought

      That fairly soon there will be one house more,

      Lacking the pictures and the books that here

      Surround me with abundant evidence

      I spent a lifetime pampering my mind.

      The new place will be of a different sort,

      Dark and austere, and I will have to find

      My way along its unforthcoming walls.

      Help is at hand here should I fall, but there

      There will be no-one to turn on the lights

      For me, and I will know I am not blind

      Only by glimpses when the empty halls

      Lead me to empty rooms, in which the nights

      Succeed each other with no day between.

      I may not see my tattered Chinese screen

      Again, but I shall have time to reflect

      That what I miss was just the bric-a-brac

      I kept with me to blunt my solitude,

      Part of my brave face when my life was wrecked

      By my gift for deceit. Truth clears away

      So many souvenirs. The shelves come clean.

      In the last, the truly last house there will be

      No treasured smithereens to take me back

      To when things hung together. I’ll conclude

      The way that I began so long ago:

      With nothingness, but know it fit for me

      This time around, now I am brought so low,

      Yet ready to move soon. When, I can’t say.

      Rounded with a Sleep

      The sun seems in control, the tide is out:

      Out to the sandbar shimmers the lagoon.

      The little children sprint, squat, squeal and shout.

      These shallows will be here until the moon

      Contrives to reassert its influence,

      And anyway, by then it will be dark.

      Old now and sick, I ponder the immense

      Ocean upon which I will soon embark:

      As if held in abeyance by dry land

      It waits for me beyond that strip of sand.

      It won’t wait long. Just for the moment, though,

      There’s time to question if my present state

      Of bathing in this flawless afterglow

      Is something I deserve. I left it late

      To come back to my family. Here they are,

      Camped on their towels and putting down their books

      To watch my grand-daughter, a natural star,

      Cartwheel and belly-flop. The whole scene looks

      As if I thought it up to soothe my soul.

      But in Arcadia, Death plays a role:

      A leading role, and suddenly I wake

      To realise that I’ve been sound asleep

      Here at my desk. I just wish the mistake

      Were rare, and not so frequent I could weep.

      The setting alters, but the show’s the same:

      One long finale, soaked through with regret,

      Somehow designed to expiate self-blame.

      But still there is no end, at least not yet:

      No cure, that is, for these last years of grief

      As I repent and yet find no relief.

      My legs are sore, and it has gone midnight.

      I’ve had my last of lounging on the beach

      To see the sweet oncoming sunset light

      Touching the water with a blush of peach,

      Smoothing the surface like a ballroom floor

      As all my loved ones pack up from their day

      And head back up the cliff path. This for sure:

      Even the memories will be washed away,

      If not by waves, by rain, which I see fall,

      Drenching the flagstones and the garden wall.

      My double doors are largely glass. I stand

      Often to contemplate the neat back yard

      My elder daughter with her artist’s hand

      Designed for me. This winter was less hard

      Than its three predecessors were. The snow

      Failed to arrive this time, but rain, for me,

      Will also do to regis
    ter time’s flow.

      The rain, the snow, the inexorable sea:

      I get the point. I’ll climb the stairs to bed,

      Perhaps to dream I’m somewhere else instead.

      All day tomorrow I have tests and scans,

      And everything that happens will be real.

      My blood might say I should make no more plans,

      And when it does so, that will be the deal.

      But until then I love to speak with you

      Each day we meet. Sometimes we even touch

      Across the sad gulf that I brought us to.

      Just for a time, so little means so much:

      More than I’m worth, I know, as I know how

      My death is something I must live with now.

      Elementary Sonnet

      Tired out from getting up and getting dressed

      I lie down for a while to get some rest,

      And so begins another day of not

      Achieving much except to dent the cot

      For just the depth appropriate to my weight –

      Which is no chasm, in my present state.

      By rights my feet should barely touch the floor

      And yet my legs are heavy metal. More

      And more I sit down to write less and less,

      Taking a half hour’s break from helplessness

      To craft a single stanza meant to give

      Thanks for the heartbeat which still lets me live:

      A consolation even now, so late –

      When soon my poor bed will be smooth and straight.

      Leçons de ténèbres

      But are they lessons, all these things I learn

      Through being so far gone in my decline?

      The wages of experience I earn

      Would service well a younger life than mine.

      I should have been more kind. It is my fate

      To find this out, but find it out too late.

      The mirror holds the ruins of my face

      Roughly together, thus reminding me

      I should have played it straight in every case,

      Not just when forced to. Far too casually

      I broke faith when it suited me, and here

      I am alone, and now the end is near.

      All of my life I put my labour first.

      I made my mark, but left no time between

      The things achieved, so, at my heedless worst,

      With no life, there was nothing I could mean.

      But now I have slowed down. I breathe the air

      As if there were not much more of it there

      And write these poems, which are funeral songs

      That have been taught to me by vanished time:

     


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