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    Out of the Blue

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      and you with your arms folded

      in that tiny immemorial way you’ve observed,

      your soft, small arms folded

      over your chest where your breath

      flows and unflows easily,

      don’t need to look at me.

      The bubble of your song bounces towards me

      its surface tension strong

      as it shudders, recovers.

      You let the song go where it wants.

      When you’ve fallen asleep, or I think you’ve fallen

      I withdraw, still singing

      or perhaps still listening to you sing,

      but you feel me going. Why am I going

      always going, instead of listening to you sing?

      Your hand knows better than mine

      and with authority

      of touch I cannot match

      wraps me round you again.

      Viking cat in the dark

      Viking cat in the dark

      is paw-licked velvet, sinew of shadow,

      a thread of smoke bitterly burning,

      a quiver of black like a riddle.

      The huts lie low

      a hoard half-hidden

      a clutch of eggs

      in the dune’s hollow

      and horned helmets

      are nightmares to wake from

      shapes cut from dreams

      – but the cat leaps.

      Like rain falling faster

      the shadows whisper

      and rain spatters

      like death’s downpour:

      ‘Fight for me, dawn-slayer,

      wake with me, sleep-sower,

      keeper of dreams,

      the dream we came for.’

      There is no noise.

      Only the quick

      paws of the cat in the dark

      like feet on the stairs,

      but the cold grey hands of the sea clap

      on the beached long-ships,

      and a shape pours itself flat

      to the chink of sword music.

      Viking cat in the dark

      is paw-licked velvet, sinew of shadow.

      A thread of smoke, bitterly burning

      quivers her body like a riddle.

      Baby sleep

      ’s

      not like any other

      day sleep night sleep

      long drive sleep

      too cold too hot sleep

      What’s that window doing shut? sleep

      get a bit of peace sleep

      hungry thirsty

      need to pee

      sleep,

      baby sleep’s

      all over the shop sleep

      new nappy and babygro poppers

      done up to the neck sleep

      fat fingers

      starfishing

      damp feathers

      on neck curling

      baby lotion and talc sleep

      sleep in Mum and Dad’s bed sleep

      cry in sleep and then sleep sleep

      sleep while the big peop

      le wash and dress sleep

      baby sleep

      Frostbite

      When you grow tired of the flame

      wumping to life in the central heating boiler,

      and the duvet sweats like obstinate flesh

      in the middle of winter,

      don’t finger the lightswitch. Leave the coil

      of electricity sleeping. Go down

      tread after tread by the draught

      of heat coming upward. The voice

      of the house is warning. Get out

      it breathes, Leave us alone

      to our shuffling of dust-mites, our sorting

      of smell and shadow into home.

      First the bolt, then the chain, then the Chubb.

      You’re outside, but even in a nightdress

      that comes to the thighs, you can’t rub the warmth off.

      Basketball player on Pentecost Monday

      With his hands he teaches wind to move –

      not this shuffle of leaves

      from rows of pollarded trees

      but the salt-laden, incoming

      breath of the Indies.

      He’s six foot seven,

      liquid in dull grey track suit,

      his trainers undone.

      There’s a small keen boy

      at his heels, yapping

      for ball-time, air-time.

      It’s playtime in the gardens

      with children sagely going round

      on patient horses they strike with small

      privileged hands.

      Behind him, gravelly sand,

      a guitarist picking

      the bones of a tune

      mournful as Sunday,

      the empty horses

      of carousels turning.

      Tell the basketball player how tight

      time is, how he’s reached perfection

      at the same time as the man with his rake

      puts the gravel straight on something.

      Tell him this is the moment

      the arrow of his life flew out of

      to return into his breastbone.

      Or say nothing.

      Tiger lookout

      Refrigerator days.

      Ours is the size of a walk-in larder,

      casing everything.

      One word

      which has gone out of fashion

      is putrefaction.

      When Simmonds fell from his tiger lookout

      it was not the growl

      nor the stripes

      that said tiger.

      It was the tiger’s breath.

      All that old, bad meat

      furring its teeth.

      For a moment Simmonds was critical,

      sniffing the exhalation of corpses,

      the walk-in larder where he was going.

      Tiger Moth caterpillar

      Two spines curve in

      as the sisters face on a gate

      in their matching cardigans.

      They are looking into something –

      a stolen Swan Vesta box

      plump with green privet,

      and there’s one match left

      with which to poke it –

      their marvellous possession.

      Inner thighs chafe on a crust of lichen.

      Riding the gate is the best game

      these two have ever come on.

      The more bloody a ballad

      they more they love it. Cigars,

      betrayal, the flames of hell

      and the slaughter of innocence

      are what speaks, makes the gate creak.

      Girls, give us a song

      in your tidy cardigans. Your hair’s

      deceptively sleek, you are

      tangled, complicit, in on it.

      Hungry Thames

      Hungry Thames, I walk over the bridge

      half-scared you’ll whittle me down

      where the brown water is eager

      and tipped with foam.

      You sigh and suck. You lick at the steps

      you would like to come up.

      Hungry Thames, we feed you on concrete,

      orange-peel, polystyrene cups,

      we hold our kids by a handful of clothing

      to let them look at your dimples,

      your smiling waters. We should hold them tighter,

      these are whirlpools, this is hunger

      lashing its tail in the mud, deep down

      where the river gets what it wants.

      The wasp

      Now winter comes and I am half-asleep

      crawling the hollow of an apple, my sound

      a battery toy in a child’s cupped hand,

      or I climb to a ledge and lie, dulled

      by its half-warmth. Half-wasp, I’m still

      helpless not to sting your exploring finger

      helpless in the pulse of my body.

      The paddle of your hand churns

      as you find something to kill me.

      I keep on stinging. I cannot learn

    &n
    bsp; through my crispness, the coat of warning

      that says what I am.

      Little Ellie and the timeshare salesman

      The man who gave little Ellie his forever

      love was a timeshare salesman.

      He let her look round the place

      when the carpet was freshly steam-cleaned

      and the teabag box was full to the brim,

      but he left little Ellie for an instant

      and she spied the used teabag jam-jar

      sodden and rusty as iron.

      Oh Ellie, whispered little Ellie,

      there have been many here before you.

      But she was smiling at the door

      when he gave her his hand, wet from the ballcock

      he’d quickly fixed in the cistern.

      In a serenade of gurgles and yawns

      the plumbing talked itself down

      and perfect Ellie was his dream.

      How could he replace or kill her

      with her genius for noticing nothing

      but the nice day, the short walk to the pool

      the view of the beach from the bathroom window?

      Sweet Ellie never crossed the time-share salesman,

      but tended her one week like a garden.

      She did not keep a diary where the others

      might be noted or brooded over.

      Kindly she watches him run on the wheel

      of his weeks till he gets back to nineteen

      where she is always happy to wait for him.

      Dusty geraniums come back to life

      in the days where Ellie waters them,

      and the time-share salesman slackens his smiles

      at the sight of Ellie’s daring paëlla:

      in week nineteen she is his forever.

      Bouncing boy

      (for Paul)

      All the squares of trampoline are taken

      by children leaping like chessmen

      who won’t play the game. Up, flying.

      from tiny freeholds, hitting the sky’s

      elastic surprise, then down.

      There’s a space for you always.

      Two kids eating ice-cream

      with careful darts of the tongue

      watch as you start to climb

      the icy November sky, hand over hand.

      You hear the clap of the sea

      and your bright blue trampoline applauding

      with the dull fervour of rubber

      each time you go down,

      and the kids eating ice-cream

      with wind in their teeth say nothing

      as the time mounts and your turn

      grows impossibly long.

      Ghost at noon

      On the white path at noon when the sun

      burns through olive and eucalyptus

      and the pale stones rattle

      as if someone’s walking,

      when the goat jumps and the sea shivers

      like a dog turning its belly upward

      to a hand that teases it,

      and the sky is cloudless but suddenly

      dark drops spatter the dust

      and there, where no one is walking,

      a line of wet footprints.

      Crickets crackle in the dry maquis,

      their sound unbroken.

      No one is walking.

      If you touch your finger to the dust, quickly,

      you’ll catch the pressure just gone.

      Greek beads

      Small, silvery, slipping

      from finger to finger,

      beads for street corners,

      beads for white noon

      when shadows curl by the walls

      and the dog in the square lolls

      with his tongue unfurled,

      beads for navy-blue evenings

      when the smell of oranges

      drifts to the fountain,

      beads for waiting on the landing-stage,

      for the heat that shimmers

      from village to village,

      for the boy guarding the goats

      and the old woman hoeing in black,

      beads for leaving to find work

      and for the dream of coming back,

      beads for remembering

      and for forgetting,

      wrapped round the wrists of babies

      and the dying,

      beads for the life we live in,

      small, silvery, slipping

      from finger to finger.

      Tea at Brandt’s

      Music plays gently. Yesterday’s morning paper

      flutters at the end of its long emigration

      from being news. This is the present,

      but when? Coconut cake, a stained napkin,

      a tea-glass bisected by long spoon.

      Any minute now it’s going to rain.

      What kind of animal is the past?

      A wooden screen makes two rooms of one.

      On the other side, where I saw her last,

      my baby girl. I’ll wipe her nose with the napkin,

      take her to the Ladies and change her,

      blow the bubble of words towards her

      that says, This is the present, there is no other.

      We are men, not beasts

      We are men, not beasts

      though we fall in the dark

      on the rattlesnake’s path

      and flinch with fire of fear

      running over our flesh

      and beat it to death,

      we are men, not beasts

      and we walk upright

      with the moss-feathered dark

      like a shawl on our shoulders

      and we carry fire

      steeply, inside a cage of fingers,

      we are men, not beasts,

      and what we cannot help wanting

      we banish – the barn yawn, the cow breath,

      the stickiness we come from.

      Index of titles and first lines

      (Titles are shown in italics, first lines in roman type.)

      A candle for the ship’s breakfast, 225

      A cow here in the June meadow, 63

      A cow here in the June meadow, 63

      Adders, 204

      A draught like a bony finger, 51

      A dream of wool, 138

      A fat young man in BERBER’S ICE CREAM PARLOUR, 184

      After a night jagged by guard-dogs and nightingales, 168

      After midday the great lazy, 102

      Ahvenanmaa, 196

      Air layering, 141

      All the squares of trampoline are taken, 246

      All the things you are not yet, 235

      A lorry-load of stuff, 18

      A meditation of the glasshouses, 143

      A mortgage on a pear tree, 131

      An Irish miner in Staffordshire, 156

      A pæony truss on Sussex place, 132

      A pear tree stands in its own maze, 131

      Approaches to winter, 75

      A pretty shape, 237

      A safe light, 85

      As good as it gets, 37

      A skater comes to this blue pond, 119

      At Cabourg, 135

      At Cabourg II, 166

      At Great Neck one Easter, 64

      At the Emporium, 226

      At three in the morning, 96

      Babes in the Wood, 216

      Baby sleep, 239

      Baron Hardup, 167

      Basketball player on Pentecost Monday, 241

      Bathing at Balnacarry, 213

      Because she told a lie, he says, 35

      Beetroot Soup, 211

      Big barbershop man, 175

      Big barbershop man turning away, 175

      Bouncing boy, 246

      Boys on the Top Board, 214

      Breakfast, 94

      Breast to breast against the azaleas, 196

      Breeze of ghosts, 60

      Bristol Docks, 32

      Brown coal, 172

      By chance I was alone in my bed the morning, 191

      Cajun, 217

      Candle poem, 225

     
    Candlemas, 154

      Christmas caves, 51

      Christmas roses, 97

      Clearing the mirror to see your face, 42

      Code-breaking in the Garden of Eden, 126

      Coiled peel goes soft on the deserted table, 88

      Cold pinches the hills around Florence, 122

      Cool as sleep, the crates ring, 74

      Cursing softly and letting the matches drop, 112

      Cyclamen, blood-red, 21

      Cyclamen, blood-red, fly into winter, 21

      Dancing man, 164

      Decoding a night’s dreams, 138

      Deep in busy lizzies and black iron, 199

      Dense slabs of braided-up lupins, 148

      Depot, 17

      Diving girl, 236

      Do they wake careless and warm, 158

      Domestic poem, 71

      Drink and the Devil, 195

      Dropped yolks of shore-lamp quiver on tarmac, 180

      Dublin 1971, 151

      Father, 216

      First, the echo, 234

      First, the retreat of bees, 20

      Fishing beyond sunset, 229

      Florence in permafrost, 122

      For all frozen things, 133

      For three years I’ve been wary of deep water, 103

      Fortune-teller on Church Road, 40

      Frostbite, 240

      ‘Fuck this staring paper and table, 81

      Getting the Strap, 203

      Ghost at noon, 247

      Giraffes in Hull, 14

      Greek beads, 248

     


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