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    Injury Time

    Page 5
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      So one day those who know my books may say

      That this is where he signed his life away.”

      Recollected in Tranquillity

      You realise that this is no reprieve

      But merely a delay?

      The comedy must end. The way it ends

      Has just been put off to another day.

      Perhaps two months from now, perhaps two years,

      It will be known to family and friends

      That you, at last, are more dead than alive,

      With nothing left to say.

      When any tears there are will be their tears,

      Not yours, the wave of silence will arrive

      With which you leave.

      So this must be the storm before the lull,

      These webs of words

      Slowly assembled at the summer’s peak

      Here in the portico of your downfall,

      As you sit watchfully to count the birds –

      So few beside the Heathrow rush of spring –

      Which in the garden briefly peck and preen

      Before continuing

      To Finland, Iceland, Baffin Land, wherever:

      Your chance to speak before you never speak

      Again, your next to final scene.

      This peace, which will be perfect by and by,

      Came out of chaos. When the drugs went wrong

      It almost seemed a burden not to die

      As I shared that Babelic rumpus room

      With the trouser thief and the lady with one song

      She sang forever. Racing, my brain teemed

      With stuff to tell the doctors so they might

      Unbolt the door, but that place was a tomb

      Sealed tight. I ate my sleeping pills and dreamed

      Of all I could have had –

      The happiness I wasted. Now, set free,

      I see that my whole life

      Had been a greedy fever. A sad spell

      Of frenzy only summed it up. My wife

      And daughters built this studio for me

      In which I read and write and rest. They know

      Something ill-mended in my mind demands

      I live alone. And so they come and go

      To help me do that, and so all is well,

      As I wait for the day the last bird lands

      And nightfall finally

      Blankets my vision of this bright arcade.

      Outside, in that cane chair,

      I sat to read The Faerie Queene and found

      Garbled accounts of knights and damsels made

      Melodic sense, in verse as light as air.

      On this desk, crowded as a burial mound

      With treasured papers, my Chinese notebook,

      Full of unfinished thoughts, will still be there,

      When I, at last, can’t reach it. Should things look

      As if I knew despair, of this be sure:

      I loved it here.

      The Dark Roses

      The roses that I sent on Mother’s Day

      Maintained, in their glass vase, an after-glow

      Of crimson lustre, but their late display

      Of faded glory finally was gone

      For good. Strange that the shape of every bloom

      Remains, the outline of its folds more clear

      Now than before. This I must dwell upon:

      Here in the sunlight of this perfect room

      These roses die well, though they bring night near –

      For the darkness in their petals seeks me too,

      And once inside it I won’t even know

      How beautifully designed they are, how true

      To life. But for the moment they are here

      Where I can see them, as I pray that you

      Will think of what I once was when I go:

      Not beautiful, as these dead things are still,

      But still too full of life for time to kill.

      Summer Surprised Us

      Supposing this is my last summer, let

      What I see here, in all its glory, seem,

      Come winter, splendid to my fading gaze

      As it is now. Curse me if I forget

      The luck that still brings me this waking dream

      With such a freshness, here in my last days,

      I feel that I was born to breathe the air

      The rain has just drenched and cooled everywhere.

      It needed cooling. Heat does not belong,

      Where I lie down now, to the same degree

      As it did there, when I had just been born

      And started to grow up. It seems plain wrong

      To feel my thin supply of energy

      Depleted further, even though the dawn

      Is such a flood of light it might as well

      Be the Pacific sun. Clear as a bell,

      Rinsed by this wetly gleaming afternoon,

      The light still sparkles undiminished. When

      The temperature retreats, as soon it must,

      Things might look more like England, and the moon

      Seem less a vast night-club for magic men,

      Unless the rearrangement of its dust

      Is permanent, and nothing from now on

      Will cease from being changed or simply gone.

      For how to know that these weeks have not been

      The first three quarters of my final act

      In which, bemused, my judgment quite undone,

      I play Malvolio when, scene by scene,

      He stumbles to his downfall? Won’t that fact –

      Though punctuated by the sunset gun –

      Not feel like this, a fantasy, with all

      These other people in a fiction’s thrall?

      I’ll ask my keen-eyed daughters. Am I here?

      Is all this sunlight real? I hear surf boom

      As if I, somehow soon, might swim once more.

      But no, these waves are only in my ear:

      Tricks, like the way the sunlight in this room,

      Transposed through time, is light I saw before

      And brings with it the young man I once knew

      Who took one look and fell in love with you.

      As if you were here now and not sky-high

      Walking among the pitched roofs of Kashmir,

      I long for you to stroll the quarter mile

      From your side of the river and drop by,

      Just to be asked if I am fading here

      In this white stream of fire. Were you to smile,

      I’d take that as a no, though I have learned

      Richly to see the sky bleached, the air burned.

      The truth is that I need no heat to melt

      And die the puddled death of the snowman.

      I do that from within. My memories

      More than suffice to tell me I’ve been dealt

      A fair hand if not better. I began

      In light like this, and saw the burning trees

      Cut swathes through mountain ranges. Far too small

      Back then to really comprehend it all,

      I almost do now. It is life, drawn from

      The roaring force of nature, even here

      In these polite, pampered gardens. If I live

      To see again the cold Elysium

      Which is the winter’s destiny, forgive –

      As if it were a figment of the air –

      The weakness I show now, if not the way

      I thought it strength, back in a heedless day.

      At some time or another, it must be

      Near in the future now that I shall lose

      My last contact with life, and so depart

      To leave behind even the memory

      Of those cross garters I was proud to choose.

      But that absurd confusion spoke my heart:

      I sought release in vain, but at the last

      It seeks me with success. The die is cast:

      This sudden touch of autumn has begun

      At last to take the shine off all I see.

      A hint of winter will be in the ai
    r

      As you fly back to us, but if the sun

      Should shine at all, it will for you and me,

      Blessing us here as first it blessed us there

      When real waves roared and how far we would get

      Together neither of us knew as yet.

      Tactics of the Air Battle

      (In this fantasy, one of the many young aircrew buried in the American cemetery outside Cambridge grows old in his home state, and writes to me.)

      No sudden death was quite as quick as when

      The enemy came from the front dead straight,

      The closing speed six hundred plus, and then

      In just one second, from the wings and snout

      He sprayed the shells that ripped your flight deck open

      And left an aimless wreck, which went straight down,

      The waist and turret gunners jumping ship

      If they were lucky. In a flank attack

      Sometimes the rudder was shot off,

      The flight crew keeping just enough control

      To turn for England. But with two or more

      Engines shut down and leaking so much fuel?

      Forget it. Like unpacked smoke-puffs

      Lone parachutes continued to appear

      For miles on end. Imagine the mad violence

      And then the slow admission of junk status

      As their hulking power symbol fell apart.

      Boys falling from the cold air, looking up,

      Saw the undoing of their citadels.

      You might ask why, then, the Krauts didn’t win.

      The answer is, they ran out of trained flyers.

      Our fighters cut theirs down at such a rate

      Luftwaffe pilots rated Ace if they

      Could land: forget about an actual fight.

      Only old hands could even get that near.

      The younger ones were heading for the wall

      Their first trip out. The Mustangs ate them up:

      The Mustangs and the Thunderbolts. P-47s

      Could go downhill like dump-trucks and come back

      Uphill like seagulls. None of the German planes

      Could mix it with a Lightning. Their night-fighters

      Stayed in the game because the British bombers

      Were unprotected. Finally, of course,

      Even the night-fighters went up by day,

      With all their radar aerials still on them,

      Cutting their speed. It was a turkey shoot:

      A Ju-88 would last ten minutes.

      The jets and rocket planes would certainly

      Have made a difference, but they were too few

      And far too late to count. I saw one once,

      I mean a jet, the 262. It went

      Across our nose as fast as you could blink

      And rippled as it launched its bunch of missiles

      At someone on the far side of the box

      From us. Someone I didn’t know, thank Christ,

      Was all gone in a flash. If that had happened

      Ten times in one raid we’d have had to stop,

      And send our bombs to Germany by mail.

      But all we saw was nothing but the future

      Just getting started, and we came home safe.

      I got to die of old age, just like you.

      Believe me, son, you didn’t miss a thing.

      The Gods Make Mischief

      The pliability of Jupiter

      Is easily explained. When Juno pleaded

      For Turnus, what she wished seemed granted her

      By the great god. But her wish was not needed

      To change his mind, which changed itself: the day

      Of death for that young man was undecided

      As yet, and in the long run Fate would say

      When it would be. Her fervour was misguided:

      She spoke too soon. My mother spoke too late.

      Our God could not postpone her husband’s dying.

      It was already done. Though God was great,

      Deep into hell her cries of grief went flying,

      And I began to be what I became,

      Doing my level best to seem undaunted:

      What use are gods, if Chance is their real name?

      The lifelong question by which I was haunted –

      Taunted, as if I were the one to blame.

      The Smocking Brick

      Across twelve thousand miles of land and ocean

      I came here to get most of my work done.

      Writings that were no more than a mere notion

      One day, and for a while were just begun,

      Grew out of those few lines to their fruition

      As if I were remembering the sun

      And surf of my original condition,

      When first I saw the shell the silkworm spun

      Was like a golden thimble for my mother

      As she worked at the smocking brick. No book

      Could be so neatly written. Now no other

      Memory haunts me like the pains she took

      To decorate those tiny frocks. The weather

      Has nothing here to match how thunder shook

      Our windows, but still, floating like a feather,

      Her needle hand, obeying her fixed look,

      Would build neat lattices hour after hour.

      Now, for her son, the hours grow few, and yet

      I might, impelled by that first taste of power,

      Write something to pay off an ancient debt

      If I sit up till dawn. Down to the wire,

      While I can still breathe I will not forget

      Networks of silk that glowed with pastel fire

      While she stitched through the day until sunset.

      It all took time, and time is a wild river

      That one day ceases to reflect the sky.

      Eventually the spinning coin will shiver,

      The rumble as it falls end with a sigh.

      When there is honest toil in the endeavour

      Piece-work is noble but cannot defy

      The night, which will not wait for me forever.

      Her work kept us alive, and as I die

      I’m certain I will think of the precision

      With which she placed the last stitch in a row.

      Never until the failing of her vision

      Did she cease to prepare her cloth and sew

      With her fine thread the rhymed and scanned equation

      Of pure expression and punctilio

      That made each separate séance an occasion.

      But why was she so quiet? Now I know.

      I know now that the shadow of non-being

      Will visit anyone who does these things

      And stay till they are done. All I was seeing

      Was somebody arranging offerings

      Before an altar, but there is no saying

      Which god was served. What grace such worship brings

      Is slow to show itself. We just keep praying

      Until that rapt moth spreads its perfect wings

      And leaves a cracked cocoon to be translated

      Into the luscious filament employed

      When seeing squares of cotton recreated,

      Making another mother overjoyed

      At how her child, too young to get excited

      By how she looks, in fact a bit annoyed,

      Becomes a princess. Suitably requited,

      The toiling seamstress profits from the void:

      And finally a poem, too, must render

      Obeisance to the dark where it can shine

      As only one more star, for no defender

      Of this art, which I still hope to make mine,

      Denies the overstock we’re buckling under.

      Yet the compulsion lives. Shaping a line

      To mark the shock of recollected thunder,

      I stitch the lightning into my design

      And see again that tireless needle gleaming

      As if its contrapuntal play of light

      Were part of what was made. If I were dreaming


      I would not also see the fruit-bat’s flight

      So clearly, or the frangipani blooming,

      Their shades of butter in plush cusps of white.

      But this is real, and now. The breakers booming

      Spatter my eyes with salt tears as I write.

      Intergalactic Junket

      Junkets my mother made would float in space

      Like flying saucers, which were all the rage

      At that time. They would settle into place

      On the kitchen table so a kid my age

      Could listen to them hum and watch them glow

      Before they disappeared without a trace

      Into the chasm of a childish face,

      A throat whose flattered gullet felt the flow.

      Sprinkled with nutmeg from beyond the stars

      The junket sat there tremulous in its plate

      And yet unmoving. Visiting milk bars

      When I was still too young to stay out late,

      I had seen sundaes more superb than this,

      But not with the divine tranquillity

      My mother’s junkets had. It seemed to me

      Their purity defied analysis.

      Just once she made the junket pink, but I,

      Craving vanilla, frowned at cochineal.

      It went down fluently enough, but why

      Fool with a classic product? Keep it real.

      My eyes must have conveyed my faint disgust.

      The visitant went back to being white

      As if it had absorbed the years of light

      It conquered spinning through the cosmic dust.

      I grew up, ate the sundae any time

      I felt like it, and never missed the bland

      Sweet smoothness of the junket. Now I climb

      Downstairs to see it coming in to land

      There on the table as it used to do

      So long ago, back when my life began.

      I found it difficult to be a man.

      This last feast seems more simple and more true.

      Front Flip Half Twist

      In the video from Wales, my granddaughter

      Steps to the wall’s edge. Just a yard below

      The beach begins, a long way from the water.

      A pause for thought. She then proceeds to throw

      A cartwheel through the air, and, when she lands,

      Stand upright on the sand, all done no hands.

      She came to her miraculous mastery

      Of this manoeuvre by a strict process –

      She still insists it was no mystery –

      Of more and more to reach down less and less

      Until, one day, the finished thing was there,

      Made manifest entirely in mid-air.

      I who can fly no longer feel I’m flying

     


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