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    Collected Poems (1958-2015)

    Page 31
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      Throwing reflections that rise and fall

      A guitar reminds you of death and taxes

      Charlie Christian outplaying the saxes

      The beginners’ call and the very last call of all

      Practical Man

      Last night I drank with a practical man

      Who seemed to think he knew me well

      He had no debts and he had no troubles

      All night long he kept setting up doubles

      And he asked me ‘What have you got to sell?’

      ‘I’ll see you right’ said the practical man

      ‘A boy like you should be living high

      All you do is get up and be funny

      And I’ll turn the laughs into folding money

      Can you name me anything that can’t buy?’

      ‘So you deal in dreams’ said the practical man

      ‘So does that mean you should be so coy?

      I fixed one chap a show on telly

      Who limped like Byron and talked like Shelley

      Through a ten-part epic on the fall of Troy’

      ‘I’ll tell you what’ said the practical man

      As he tapped the ash from a purple fag

      ‘Let’s head uptown for a meal somewhere

      You can sing me something while we’re driving there

      There’s a grand piano in the back of my Jag’

      So I sang my song to the practical man

      It sounded bad but she couldn’t hear

      And the silent lights of town went streaming

      As if the car was a turtle dreaming

      The night was sad and she was nowhere near

      ‘It’s a great idea’ said the practical man

      As they brought in waiters on flaming swords

      ‘You love this chick and it’s really magic

      But she won’t play ball – that’s kind of tragic

      Now how do we get this concept on the boards?’

      ‘I see it like this’ said the practical man

      As he chose a trout from the restaurant pool

      ‘We change it round so she’s going frantic

      To win the love of the last romantic

      And you’re the one, her wild creative fool’

      So I thought it all over as the practical man

      Watched them slaughter the fatted calf

      I saw again her regretful smile

      Sweet to look at though it meant denial

      It was bound to hurt but I had to laugh

      And that’s when I told the practical man

      As he drank champagne from the Holy Grail

      There are some ideas you can’t play round with

      Can’t let go of and you can’t give ground with

      ’Cause when you die they’re what you’re found with

      There are just some songs that are not for sale

      Cottonmouth

      Cottonmouth had such a way of saying things

      Phrases used to fly like they were wearing wings

      Never had to weigh a word

      Said the first thing that occurred

      And round your head the stuff he said went running rings

      Cottonmouth, what a brain

      Absolutely insane

      Cottonmouth would tell the girls he sighed for them

      He talked of all the lonely nights he cried for them

      Afterwards they told their men

      I just saw Cottonmouth again

      That guy’s a scream, and never guessed he died for them

      Cottonmouth, what a brain

      Absolutely insane

      Cottonmouth packed up one day and did a fade

      Turned edgeways on and vanished like a razor blade

      Considering how people here

      Are downright simple and sincere

      It could have been the smartest move he ever made

      Beware of the Beautiful Stranger

      On the midsummer fairground alive with the sound

      And the lights of the Wurlitzer merry-go-round

      The midway was crowded and I was the man

      Who coughed up a quid in the dark caravan

      To the gypsy who warned him of danger

      ‘Beware of the beautiful stranger’

      ‘You got that for nothing’ I said with a sigh

      As the queen’s head went up to her critical eye

      ‘The lady in question is known to me now

      And I’d like to beware but the problem is how

      Do you think I was born in a manger?

      I’m in love with the beautiful stranger’

      The gypsy (called Lee as all soothsayers are)

      Bent low to her globular fragment of star

      ‘This woman will utterly screw up your life

      She will tempt you from home, from your children and wife

      She’s a devil and nothing will change her

      Get away from the beautiful stranger’

      ‘That ball needs a re-gun’ I said, shelling out

      ‘The future you see there has all come about

      Does it show you the girl as she happens to be

      A Venus made flesh in a shell full of sea?

      Does it show you the shape of my danger?

      Can you show me the beautiful stranger?’

      ‘I don’t run a cinema here, little man

      But lean over close and tune in if you can

      You breathe on the glass, give a rub with your sleeve

      Slip me your wallet, sit tight and believe

      And the powers-that-be will arrange a

      Pre-release of the beautiful stranger’

      In the heart of the glass I saw galaxies born

      The eye of the storm and the light of the dawn

      And then with a click came a form and a face

      That stunned me not only through candour and grace

      But because she was really a stranger

      A total and beautiful stranger

      ‘Hello there’ she said with her hand to her brow

      ‘I’m the one you’ll meet after the one you know now

      There’s no room inside here to show you us all

      But behind me the queue stretches right down the hall

      For the damned there is always a stranger

      There is always a beautiful stranger’

      ‘That’s your lot’ said Miss Lee as she turned on the light

      ‘These earrings are hell and I’m through for the night

      If they’d put up a booster not far from this pitch

      I could screen you your life to the very last twitch

      But I can’t even get the Lone Ranger

      One last word from the beautiful stranger’

      ‘You live in a dream and the dream is a cage’

      Said the girl ‘And the bars nestle closer with age

      Your shadow burned white by invisible fire

      You will learn how it rankles to die of desire

      As you long for the beautiful stranger’

      Said the vanishing beautiful stranger

      ‘Here’s a wallet for you and five nicker for me’

      Said the gypsy ‘And also here’s something for free

      Watch your step on my foldaway stairs getting down

      And go slow on the flyover back into town

      There’s a slight but considerable danger

      Give my love to the beautiful stranger’

      Have You Got a Biro I Can Borrow?

      Have you got a biro I can borrow?

      I’d like to write your name

      On the palm of my hand, on the walls of the hall

      The roof of the house, right across the land

      So when the sun comes up tomorrow

      It’ll look to this side of the hard-bitten planet

      Like a big yellow button with your name written on it

      Have you got a biro I can borrow?

      I’d like to write some lines

      In praise of your knee, and the back of your neck

      And the double-decker bus that brings you to me


      So when the sun comes up tomorrow

      It’ll shine on a world made richer by a sonnet

      And a half-dozen epics as long as the Aeneid

      Oh give me a pen and some paper

      Give me a chisel or a camera

      A piano and a box of rubber bands

      I need room for choreography

      And a darkroom for photography

      Tie the brush into my hands

      Have you got a biro I can borrow?

      I’d like to write your name

      From the belt of Orion to the share of the Plough

      The snout of the Bear to the belly of the Lion

      So when the sun goes down tomorrow

      There’ll never be a minute

      Not a moment of the night that hasn’t got you in it

      Laughing Boy

      In all the rooms I’ve hung my hat, in all the towns I’ve been

      It stuns me I’m not dead already from the shambles that I’ve seen

      I’ve seen a girl hold back her hair to light a cigarette

      And things like that a man like me can’t easily forget

      I’ve got the only cure for life, and the cure for life is joy

      I’m a crying man that everyone calls Laughing Boy

      A kid once asked me in late September for a shilling for the guy

      And I looked that little operator in her wheeling-dealing eye

      And I tossed a bob with deep respect in her old man’s trilby hat

      It seems to me that a man like me could die of things like that

      I’ve got the only cure for life, and the cure for life is joy

      I’m a crying man that everyone calls Laughing Boy

      I’ve seen landladies who lost their lovers at the time of

      Rupert Brooke

      And they pressed the flowers from Sunday rambles and then

      forgot which book

      And I paid the rent thinking ‘Anyway, buddy, at least you

      won’t get wet’

      And I tried the bed and lay there thinking ‘They haven’t

      got you yet’

      I’ve got the only cure for life, and the cure for life is joy

      I’m a crying man that everyone calls Laughing Boy

      I’ve read the labels on a hundred bottles for eyes and lips and hair

      And I’ve seen girls breathe on their fingernails and wiggle them

      in the air

      And I’ve often wondered who the hell remembers as far back as

      last night

      It seems to me that a man like me is the only one who might

      I’ve got the only cure for life, and the cure for life is joy

      I’m a crying man that everyone calls Laughing Boy

      Sunlight Gate

      The heroes ride out through the Sunlight Gate

      And out of the sunset return

      I have no idea how they spend their day

      With a selfless act, or a grandstand play

      But high behind them the sky will burn

      In the glittering hour of return

      The heroes ride out in unbroken ranks

      But with gaps in their number come back

      I have no idea how they lose their men

      To some new threat, or the same again

      But they talk a long while near the weapon stack

      In the clattering hour they come back

      The heroes return through the Sunset Gate

      But their faces are never the same

      I have no idea why their eyes go cold

      And the young among them already look old

      But high behind them the sky’s aflame

      In the flickering hour of their fame

      The Faded Mansion on the Hill

      When you see what can’t be helped go by

      With bloody murder in its eye

      And the mouth of a man put on the rack

      The voice of a man about to crack

      When you see the litter of their lives

      The stupid children, bitter wives

      Your self-esteem in disarray

      You do your best to climb away

      From the streaming traffic of decay

      Believing if you will that all these sick hate days

      Are just a kind of trick fate plays

      But still behind your shaded eyes

      That mind-constricting thick weight stays

      When on the outskirts of the town

      Comes bumping cavernously down

      Out of the brick gateways

      From the faded mansion on the hill

      The out-of-date black Cadillac

      With the old man crumpled in the back

      That time has not yet found the time to kill

      Between the headlands to the sea the fleeing yachts of

      summer go

      White as a sheet and faster than the driven snow

      Like dolphins riding high and giant seabirds flying low

      And square across the wind the cats and wingsails pull

      ahead

      Living their day as if it almost could be said

      The cemetery of home could somehow soon be left for dead

      But the graveyard of tall ships is really here

      Where the grass breaks up the driveway more each year

      And here is all these people have

      And everything they can’t retrieve

      The beach the poor men never reach

      The shore the rich men never leave

      Between the headlands from the sea the homing yachts of

      summer fill

      The night with shouts and falling sails and then are still

      The avenues wind up into the darkness of the hill

      Where time tonight might find the time to kill

      Thirty-year Man

      Nobody here yet

      From the spotlight that will ring her not a glimmer

      Not a finger on its squeaky dimmer

      I play piano in a jazz quartet

      That works here late with a young girl singer

      And along from the darkened and empty tables

      By the covered-up drums and the microphone cables

      At the end of the room the piano glistens

      Like the rail at the end of the nave

      Thirty years in the racket

      A brindled crew cut and a silk-lined jacket

      And it isn’t my hands that fill this place

      It’s a kid’s voice still reaching into space

      It’s her they’re driving down to hear

      And it’s my bent-over back she’s standing near

      Nobody talks yet

      From the glasses that will touch soon not a tinkle

      Not a paper napkin shows a wrinkle

      I play piano in a jazz quartet

      That backs a winner while the big notes crinkle

      And along from the darkened and empty tables

      By the covered-up drums and the microphone cables

      At the end of the room the piano glistens

      Like the rail at the end of the nave

      And I play a few things while no one listens

      Thirty years in the racket

      A brindled crew cut and a silk-lined jacket

      And it isn’t my name that brings them in

      It’s a little girl just starting to begin

      It’s her they’re piling in to see

      And I’d kill that kid if she wasn’t killing me

      Nobody moves yet

      From the tables near the bandstand not a rustle

      Not a loudmouth even moves a muscle

      I play piano in a jazz quartet

      That backs a giver while the takers hustle

      And along from the darkened and empty tables

      By the covered-up drums and the microphone cables

      At the end of the room the piano glistens

      Like bones at the end of a cave

      And I play a few things while no one listens

      For an hour alone spells freedom to the slave

      Carnation
    s on the Roof

      He worked setting tools for a multi-purpose punch

      In a shop that made holes in steel plates

      He could hear himself think through a fifty-minute lunch

      Of the kids, gas and stoppages, the upkeep and the rates

      While he talked about Everton and Chelsea with his mates

      With gauge and micrometer, with level and with rule

      While chuck and punch were pulsing like a drum

      He checked the finished product like a master after school

      The slugs looked like money and the cutting-oil like scum

      And to talk with a machinist he made signals like the dumb

      Though he had no great gifts of personality or mind

      He was generally respected, and the proof

      Was a line of hired Humbers tagging quietly behind

      A fat Austin Princess with carnations on the roof

      Forty years of metal tend to get into your skin

      The surest coin you take home from your wage

      The green cleaning jelly only goes to rub it in

      And that glitter in the wrinkle of your knuckle shows your age

      Began when the dignity of work was still the rage

      He was used and discarded in a game he didn’t own

      But when the moment of destruction came

      He showed that a working man is more than flesh and bone

      The hands on his chest flared more brightly than his name

      For a technicolor second as he rolled into the flame

      Though he had no great gifts of personality or mind

      He was generally respected, and the proof

      Was a line of hired Humbers tagging quietly behind

      A fat Austin Princess with carnations on the roof

      The Hypertension Kid

      Last night I met the Hypertension Kid

      Grimly chasing shorts with halves of bitter

      In a Mayfair club they call the Early Quitter

     


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