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    Angels Over Elsinore

    Page 4
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      He put Sydney Tech on the football map.

      There were whole GPS teams he went through

      Like a bat through a dark cave.

      Sydney High, with backs the size of forwards,

      Only barely stopped him,

      And they practically used land mines.

      Wanting to be him, I so conspicuously wasn’t

      That I would brood for hours in the library,

      One kid from Kogarah utterly wiped out

      By the lustre of another.

      Later on, as a pro, he won national fame.

      His shining story followed me to England:

      I couldn’t get away from the bastard.

      By the time I got a slice of fame myself –

      And we’re talking about the echo of a whisper –

      His nephew Mark was playing:

      Clear proof that the gift was in the blood.

      Reg is retired now

      And not writing as many poems as I am,

      But give me my life again and I would still rather

      Be worshipped in the school playground

      By those who saw him score the winning try,

      A human dodgem snaking through a bunch of blokes

      All flying the wrong way like literary critics –

      Or at least I think so,

      Now that I can’t sleep without socks on.

      At Ian Hamilton’s Funeral

      Another black tie invitation comes:

      And once again, the black tie is the long

      Thin one and not the bow. No muffled drums

      Or stuff like that, but still it would be wrong

      To flout the solemn forms. Fingers and thumbs

      Adjust the knot as I recall the song

      About the gang that sang ‘Heart of My Heart’.

      Death brings together what time pulled apart.

      In Wimbledon, a cold bright New Year’s Eve

      Shines on the faces that you used to know

      But only lights the depth to which they grieve

      Or are beginning to. The body-blow

      You dealt us when you left we will believe

      When it sinks in. We haven’t let you go

      As yet. Outside the church, you’re here with us.

      Whatever’s said, it’s you that we discuss.

      We speak of other things, but what we mean

      Is you, and who you were, not where you are.

      No one would call the centre of the scene

      That little box inside the big black car.

      Two things we wish were true: you made a clean

      Getaway, and you have not gone far.

      One thing we’re sure of: now the breath is fled

      You aren’t in there, you’re somewhere else instead –

      Safe in a general memory. We file

      Inside. The London literati take

      Their places pew to pew and aisle to aisle

      At murmured random. Nothing is at stake

      Except the recollection of your smile.

      All earned it. Who most often? For your sake

      Men wrote all night, and as for women, well,

      How many of them loved you none can tell.

      Those who are here among us wear the years

      With ease, as fine-boned beauty tends to do.

      It wasn’t just your looks that won the tears

      They spill today when they remember you.

      Most of us had our minds on our careers.

      You were our conscience, and your women knew

      Just by our deference the man in black

      Who said least was the leader of the pack.

      Dressed all your life for mourning, you made no

      Display. Although your prose was eloquent,

      Your poetry fought shy of outward show.

      Pain and regret said no more than they meant.

      Love sued for peace but had nowhere to go.

      Joy was a book advance already spent,

      And yet by day, free from the soul’s midnight,

      Your conversation was a sheer delight.

      Thirsty for more of it, we came to drink

      In Soho. While you read his manuscript

      You gave its perpetrator time to think

      Of taking up another trade. White-lipped

      He watched you sneer. But sometimes you would blink

      Or nod or even chuckle while you sipped

      Your scotch, and then came the acceptance fee:

      The wit, the gossip, the hilarity.

      You paid us from your only source of wealth.

      Your finances were always in a mess.

      We told each other we did good by stealth.

      In private we took pride in a success:

      Knowing the way of life that wrecked your health

      Was death-defying faith, not fecklessness,

      We preened to feel your hard-won lack of guile

      Rub off on us for just a little while.

      For lyric truth, such suffering is the cost –

      So the equation goes you incarnated.

      The rest of us must ponder what we lost

      When we so prudently equivocated.

      But you yourself had time for Robert Frost –

      His folksy pomp and circumstance you hated,

      Yet loved his moments of that pure expression

      You made your own sole aim if not obsession.

      Our quarrel about that’s not over yet,

      But here today we have to let it rest.

      The disagreements we could not forget

      In life, will fade now and it’s for the best.

      Your work was a sad trumpet at sunset.

      My sideshow razzmatazz you rarely blessed

      Except with the reluctant grin I treasured

      The most of all the ways my stuff was measured.

      Laughter in life, and dark, unsmiling art:

      There lay, or seemed to lie, the paradox.

      Which was the spirit, which the mortal part?

      As if in answer, borne aloft, the box

      Goes by one slow step at a time. The heart

      At last heaves and the reservoir unlocks

      Of sorrow. That was you, and you are gone:

      First to the altar, then to oblivion.

      The rest is ceremony, and well said.

      Your brother speaks what you would blush to hear

      Were you alive and standing with bowed head.

      But you lie straight and hidden, very near

      Yet just as far off as the other dead

      Each of us knows will never reappear.

      You were the governor, the chief, the squire,

      And now what’s left of you leaves for the fire.

      Ashes will breed no phoenix, you were sure

      Of that, but not right. You should hear your friends

      Who rise to follow, and outside the door

      Agree this is a sad day yet it ends

      In something that was not so clear before:

      The awareness of love, how it defends

      Itself against forgetfulness, and gives

      Through death the best assurance that it lives.

      Press Release from Plato

      Delayed until the sacred ship got back

      From Delos, the last hour of Socrates

      Unfolded smoothly. His time-honoured knack

      For putting everybody at their ease

      Was still there even while the numbness spread

      Up from his feet. All present in the cell

      Were much moved by the way he kept his head

      As he spoke less, but never less than well.

      Poor Crito and Apollodorus wept

      Like Xanthippe, but not one tear was his

      From start to finish. Dignity was kept.

      If that much isn’t certain, nothing is.

      I only wish I could have been there too.

      When, later on, I wrote down every word,

      I double-checked – the least that I could do –

      To make it sound as if I’d
    overheard.

      But let’s face facts. He lives because of me.

      That simple-seeming man and what he meant

      To politics and to philosophy –

      These things have not survived by accident.

      Deals to be done and details to discuss

      Called me elsewhere. I’m sorry for that still.

      He owed a cock to Aesculapius.

      Socratic question: guess who paid the bill?

      Young Lady Going to Dakar

      Another annual boat trip from Le Havre

      To Bordeaux, but this time different. When Lautrec

      Beheld the girl from Cabin 54

      On deck reading, he decided to stay on

      Until Lisbon at least. Painting had raised

      The Paris cabarets, dance-halls and brothels

      To angelic levels, but this unclouded creature

      Started where all that finished. How not dream –

      As she in her deckchair read and he nearby

      Sketched for La Passagère du cinquante-quatre:

      Promenade en yacht – that she would see his tears

      And ask him to come with her to Dakar,

      There to return his looks with the same favour,

      Even for his legs? The painter’s friend

      Maurice Gilbert howled down the mad idea

      Of Africa. They got off at Lisbon

      And returned to Bordeaux overland.

      In Toledo, for the first time in his life,

      He saw El Greco. Dry-eyed, he took on

      More strength, as if more strength were what he needed,

      And not what he would instantly have traded

      For just one glance from her untouched by pity:

      Not even playful. Casual would have done.

      The naked flame behind that cabin door!

      Perish the thought. Paint her and finish her,

      Drowned like the Holy Name in molten gold.

      Ramifications of Pure Beauty

      Passing the line-up of the narrow-boats

      The swans proceed down river. As they go

      They sometimes dip and lift an inch or so.

      A swan is not a stick that merely floats

      With the current. Currents might prove too slow

      Or contrary. Therefore the feet deploy:

      Trailed in the glide, they dig deep for the thrust

      That makes the body bob. Though we don’t see

      The leg swing forward and extend, it must

      Do so. Such a deduction can’t destroy

      Our sense-impression of serenity,

      But does taint what we feel with what we know.

      Bounced from up-sun by Focke-Wulf ‘Long Nose’

      Ta -152s, Pierre Clostermann

      Noted their bodies ‘fined down by the speed’:

      And so they were, to his eyes. Glider wings,

      Long legs and close-cowled engine made the pose

      Of that plane poised when stock-still. In the air,

      High up and flat out, it looked fleet indeed.

      What pulled it through the sky was left implied:

      You had to know the turning blades were there,

      Like the guns, the ammo and the man inside

      Who might have thought your Tempest pretty too –

      But not enough to stop him killing you.

      The crowds for Titian cope with the appeal

      Of flayed Actaeon. Horror made sublime:

      We see that. Having seen it, we relax

      With supine ladies. Pin-ups of their time,

      Surely they have no hinterland of crime?

      Corruption would show up like needle-tracks.

      No, they are clean, as he was. All he knew

      Of sin was painting them with not much on.

      Even to fill a Spanish contract, he

      Fleshed out the abstract with the sumptuous real –

      Brought on the girls and called it poetry.

      Philip II felt the same. Why think

      At this late date about the mortal stink

      Of the war galley, graceful as a swan?

      The Serpent Beguiled Me

      Following Eve, you look for apple cores

      Along the riverbank, tossed in the mud.

      Following Adam down long corridors,

      You swing your torch to look for spit and blood.

      He got his chest condition when he learned

      Contentment made her curious. He thought

      He was enough for her, and what he earned

      Would keep her pinned while he played covert sport.

      Alas, not so. She claimed that privilege too,

      And even, under wraps, nursed the same pride

      In taking satiation as her due –

      A cue to call herself dissatisfied.

      That rate of change was coded by the tree

      Into the fruit. The instant thrill of sin

      Turned sweet release to bitter urgency:

      His fig leaf was flicked off, and hers sucked in.

      From that day forth, the syrup she gave down

      Smacked of the knowledge that she felt no shame.

      The modesty for which she won renown

      Was feigned to keep her freedom free of blame.

      There was a time when, if he had not worn

      Her out, she would have lain awake and wept.

      Why was the truth, we ask, so slow to dawn?

      He should have guessed it from how well she slept.

      And when she turned to him, as she did still,

      Though the old compulsion was no longer there,

      The readiness with which she drank her fill

      Told him in vain her fancy lay elsewhere.

      He never faced the fact until she went.

      He tracked her down and asked her what was wrong.

      For once she said exactly what she meant:

      ‘It was perfect. It just went on too long.’

      State Funeral

      In memory of Shirley Strickland de la Hunty

      Famous for overcoming obstacles

      She finally finds one that checks her flight.

      Hit by the leading foot, a hurdle falls:

      Except when, set in concrete, it sits tight.

      Not that she hit too many. Most she cleared,

      Her trailing leg laid effortlessly flat.

      As in repose, at full tilt she appeared

      Blessed with a supple grace. On top of that

      She studied physics, took a good degree,

      Had several languages to read and speak.

      Alone, she wasn’t short of company:

      In company she shone. She was unique

      Even among our girl Olympians

      For bringing the mind’s power and body’s poise

      To perfect balance. Ancient Greeks had plans

      Along those lines, but strictly for the boys.

      Her seven medals in three separate Games

      Should have been eight, but she retired content.

      In time she sold the lot to feed the flames

      Of her concern for the Environment.

      Civic responsibility: but one

      Kind of pollution lay outside her scope

      To counteract. The races she had run

      Were won now by sad cyborgs fuelled with dope.

      It started in the East. The State required

      Results that only science could supply.

      The female victims, suitably rewired

      For victory, could do everything but fly.

      And if some wept for how they changed, too bad.

      The doctors did what they were ordered to

      And told the chosen ones they should be glad:

      Drink this, and it will make a man of you.

      The plague spread to the West, where money talked.

      Poor women, like poor men, had much to gain

      Through muscle. The bad bottle was uncorked.

      They plucked their chins and thought it worth the pain.

      Perhaps it was, yet one glimpse of Flo-Jo


      Coiled in her starting blocks told you the cost.

      Transmuted to a charging buffalo,

      She mourned with painted nails for what she’d lost.

      But more was lost than that. The time had come

      When no one could be trusted any more

      Because to play it straight seemed simply dumb,

      And who remembered how things were before?

      Desire beats scruple into second place.

      Gratification makes a fool of thrift.

      The only rules are Rafferty’s. The race

      Is to the sly that once was to the swift.

      A brighter future, back there in the past,

      Flared for a moment but it flickered out.

      It speaks, our flag that flutters at half mast,

      Of final silence. Let it silence doubt:

      When Shirley raced, the wings on her spiked shoes

      Were merely mythical, like Mercury’s.

      She did it unassisted, win or lose.

      The world she did it in died by degrees

      While she looked on. Now she is spared the sight

      At last. The bobby-dazzler won’t be back,

      Who ran for love and jumped for sheer delight

      In a better life and on a different track –

      We have too much if she is what we lack.

      This Is No Drill

      Out on my singing teacher’s patio

      While waiting for my lesson, I sat smoking,

      And on the flag-stone about three feet from my chair

      A scoop of bird shit suddenly appeared.

      It looked like a nouvelle cuisine hors d’oeuvre,

      A brown-green snail-pulp dollop on a bed

      Of mascarpone hardening to meringue

      As I watched, stupefied. I searched the sky

      And there was nothing. Clean sweep. Been and gone.

      So high up that it flies with the U-2s

      And sees the Earth’s curve, this bird calculates

      Trajectories with so much to factor in –

      Cloud density, speed, height, wind over target –

      The wonder is it didn’t miss by miles.

      Instead, the point of impact was so close

      The shock wave took the air out of my lungs.

      Inside the house I croaked scales, and remembered

      That day in the Piazza Santa Croce –

      It must be thirty years back, maybe more –

      When I got taken out by such a load

      I felt the weight, and had to sit around

      While the gunk dried on my brand new jacket. Why

      These sneak attacks? We give them enough aid.

      At least Prometheus and Tippi Hedren

      Could see them coming. This is something else.

      What do they want, a seat at the UN?

     


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