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    Counting Backwards

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    like a fire as it sinks

      and the woman crooned when she was able

      across the impossible inches.

      At that moment at the horizon there came a horseman

      pressed to the saddle, galloping, galloping

      fast as the whoop of an ambulance siren –

      and just as unlikely. What happened

      was slower and all of a piece.

      She died. He lived (the man in the fields),

      the child got by on a crust

      and lived to be thirty, with sons. In the end

      we came to be born too. Just.

      Getting the Strap

      The Our Father, the moment of fear.

      He dodged round us and ran,

      but was fetched back again

      to stand before us on the platform.

      The Our Father, the moment of fear

      as the fist gripped and he hung

      from the headmaster’s arm,

      doubling on the spot like a rabbit

      blind for home.

      The Our Father, the moment of fear.

      The watch he’d stolen was given

      back to its owner, dumb

      in the front row, watching the strapping.

      The Our Father, the moment of fear.

      The strap was old and black and it cracked

      on belly buttock and once across his lip

      because he writhed and twisted.

      He would not stand and take it.

      The Our Father, the moment of fear.

      There was a lot of sun

      leaking through churchy windows

      onto a spurt of urine.

      After an age of watching

      we sang the last hymn.

      Adders

      This path is silky with dust

      where a lizard balances across bracken fronds

      and a brown butterfly opens wide

      to the stroke of the sun,

      where a trawler feels its way along the sandbanks

      and two yachts, helplessly paired, tack far out

      like the butterflies which have separated and gone quiet.

      A wild damson tree bulges with wasps

      among heaps that are not worth picking,

      and there a branch splits white with the lightning

      of too heavy a harvest.

      The lizard is gone in a blink.

      Its two-pronged tail – half withered, half growing –

      flicks out of the sun.

      For a moment the pulse in its throat

      keeps the grass moving.

      A grass-bound offering of yarrow,

      rosebay willow herb and veined convolvulus

      lies to one side of the path

      as if someone’s coming back.

      Instead, the sift of the dust –

      beneath the bracken these hills are full of adders.

      The conception

      In the white sheets I gave you

      everything I am capable of –

      at the wrong time

      of the month we opened

      to the conception,

      you were dewed like a plum

      when at two A.M.

      you reached under the bed

      for a drink of water adrift

      in yesterday’s clothes,

      our sheets were a rope

      caught between our thighs,

      we might easily have died

      but we kept on climbing.

      Scan at 8 weeks

      The white receiver

      slides up my vagina,

      I turn and you’ve come,

      though I’m much too old for this

      and you’re much too young.

      That’s the baby

      says the radiographer.

      You are eight millimetres long

      and pulsing,

      bright in the centre of my much-used womb

      which to my astonishment

      still looks immaculate.

      You are all heart,

      I watch you tick and tick

      and wonder

      what you will come to,

      will this be our only encounter

      in the white gallery of ultrasound

      or are you staying?

      One day will we talk about this

      moment when I first saw your spaceship

      far off, heading for home?

      Pedalo

      She swam to me smiling, her teeth

      pointed by salt water, her mouth

      a rock-pool’s spat-out wine gum,

      and then the tide flung

      over her threshold,

      and her lips moved.

      The valve of her mouth was plumed

      with salt-sweet tendrils,

      sea danced from her pelt

      of oil and muscle,

      she rested her elbows on my pedalo

      and there she hung

      browning the pads of her shoulders

      like a snake in the sun.

      On shore thunderhead pines

      drifted and swelled

      like August umbrellas

      stunning the fronts of hotels.

      The sharp tide rinsed

      over her threshold

      as she dived once

      and an angler cast

      with lightning-proof rod

      from the crinkled rocks.

      A slow Medusa tilted beneath her,

      shadowing toes and ankles

      then on with its belly to the south,

      braille on its tentacles.

      She could read it like a newspaper

      as it hunted alongside her.

      I shivered

      at the roll of her syllables,

      and her joined feet winnowing,

      and so I trawled her with me

      over a shallow forest of dog-jawed

      fruit sucking the trees,

      past angler-fish socketing sand

      with stone-cold faces,

      through shrimps which divided between them

      her armpit crevices

      then flicked that way and this

      tasting the dew of her breasts.

      I trawled her past innocent sand

      and the spumy outstretched arms

      of agar and tangle –

      but no, I wouldn’t look down

      however she called to me

      until my fingers were shrunk

      like old laundry.

      I did not dare look down

      to be snagged by ruby and seal-black

      trees relaxing their weave.

      On shore nobody’s waiting.

      The children, firm and delicious

      as morning goods, have sheathed up their spades.

      The boy with burned legs

      has stepped out of his pantaloons

      and skips in his blue vest

      on the verandah boards.

      The big one lights a mosquito candle,

      Dad fills his glass of wine

      four times, while they count,

      and crickets saw in the ditch, frantic

      along with the old car number-plate

      and the boys’ jar of fishing maggots.

      They are screeching, all of them:

      night, night, night’s come

      and no one’s ever had a pedalo out this long.

      Night-wind sifts on the shore

      where striped recliners and wind-breaks

      squeak by the green pavilion

      crying for more.

      I’ve lost my wife to the sea

      Dad thinks hazily,

      and takes another bottle of Muscadet

      out of the gas cooler,

      he imagines her dreaming

      and sleeping miles from him,

      each breath takes her farther,

      toes in the air,

      sea claps under her pedalo

      impudently happy –

      Below me now a mirror of wave-ruts

      in firm brown sand,

      I’d pulled her with me for miles

      and there was nowhere to hide.

      No
    w let me see you swim back

      I said. She was mouthing

      like mackerel tossed in a bucket

      when the man’s too busy to kill it,

      with her scale-lapped bathing-hat

      fly-blown and crazing.

      She had nothing on underneath.

      She was bare and bald as an eel.

      Now she was an old bathing-woman

      a mackintoshed marine Venus,

      now she was that girl with lipstick

      a push-up bra and a beehive,

      now she was a slippery customer at Cannes

      bare-breasted and young,

      now she was my old

      familiar snake again.

      I took her curls in my hands and I pulled

      but they were limpetted, smiling,

      and there were just the two of us rocking.

      We were close as spies

      and she stayed silent

      till day dived after its horizon

      and the sea rustled with moonlight.

      Swell shuts and opens

      like a throat,

      she claps

      under my pedalo

      impudently happy.

      Where are you now

      my sister, my spouse?

      Clap with one hand

      or clap to nothing –

      I know you can.

      Kiss me with the kisses of your mouth

      my sister, my spouse.

      The pedalo rocks

      and is still again.

      Beetroot Soup

      Its big red body ungulps

      from the bowl in the fridge

      with a fat shiver.

      Glazed

      with yellow beading of grease

      the soup melts from the edge,

      yesterday’s beetroot

      turns the texture of tongues

      rolling their perfect ovals

      out of the silt at the bottom.

      Like duck breast-feathers, the dumplings

      wisp to the surface, curl

      as the soup brightens

      just off the boil.

      There’ll be pearl onions

      – two to a mouthful –

      white butter,

      then later

      plums

      piled in a bucket

      under the table

      thatched with dull leaves

      and a black

      webbing of twig

      over their round

      sleep.

      When the soup’s done

      yellow

      constellations

      burst on its skin,

      bread goes to work

      wiping and sopping

      the star-scum

      set in a slick

      on the base of the pot –

      chicken fat.

      The Diving Reflex

      Where the great ship sank I am,

      where cathedrals of ice breathe through me

      down naves of cold

      I tread and roll,

      where the light goes

      and the pressure weighs

      in the rotten caves of an iceberg’s side

      I glide,

      I am mute, not breathing,

      my shoulders hunched to the stream

      with the whales, drowsing.

      Bells rang in my blood

      as I went down

      purling, heart over heel

      through the nonchalant

      fish-clad ocean –

      her inquisitive kiss

      slowed me to this

      great cartwheel.

      Down I go, tied to my rope.

      I have my diving reflex to sister me,

      and the blubbery sea cow

      nods, knowing me.

      There is blood in my veins

      too thick for panic,

      there is a down

      so deep a whale

      thins to a sheet of paper

      and here I hang.

      I will not drown.

      The diving reflex can enable the human body to shut down and maintain life for as long as forty minutes underwater at low temperatures.

      Bathing at Balnacarry

      Two miles or so beyond

      the grey flank of the farm

      and the wall of gravestones

      the oncoming rain

      put an edge on the mountains,

      they were blue and sure

      as the blade of a pocket knife

      whizzed to a razor traverse

      cutting the first

      joint of my thumb –

      It was stitched, not bleeding,

      the dark threads in the sea were weeds

      and my son was packing them

      between the stones of his dam.

      He was holding back the river

      while the mountain punctured clouds

      to hold back rain

      no farther off than we’d cycled

      bumping towards our swim.

      In the grey purse of Balnacarry

      there were red pebbles and smooth pebbles

      and the close grain of the water,

      the men were absent –

      one walking in the woods

      one fishing off the rocks –

      the child behind me built up his dam

      through which the downpour would blossom

      in the sea at Balnacarry –

      it was cold, but not lonely

      as I stripped and swam.

      Boys on the Top Board

      Boys on the top board

      too high to catch.

      Noon is painting them out.

      Where the willow swans

      on the quarry edge

      they tan and sweat

      in the place of divers

      with covered nipples –

      Olympians,

      that was the way of it.

      Boys in the breeze

      on the top board

      where the willow burns

      golden and green

      on feet grappling –

      boys fooling

      shoulder to shoulder,

      light shaking.

      The lake’s in shadow,

      the day’s cooling,

      time to come down –

      they stub their heels on the sun

      then pike-dive

      out of its palm.

      Sylvette Scrubbing

      Sylvette scrubbing,

      arms of a woman

      marbled with muscle

      swabbing the sill,

      tiny red grains

      like suck kisses

      on Sylvette’s skin,

      Sylvette’s wrists

      in and out of the water

      as often as otters.

      She grips that pig of a brush

      squirts bristle

      makes the soap crawl then

      wipes it all up.

      Babes in the Wood

      Father,

      I remember when you left us.

      I knew all along

      it was going to happen.

      You gave me bread but wouldn’t look at me

      and Hansel couldn’t believe it

      because you were his hero,

      but I loved you and knew

      when you stroked my hair you were bound to leave us.

      It was Hansel who crumbled the bread

      while I skipped at your side and pretended

      to prattle questions and guess nothing.

      Father,

      did you drive home quickly or slowly,

      thinking of your second family

      waiting to grab your legs with shrieks of ‘Daddy!’

      and of your new wife’s face, smoothing

      now she sees you’re alone?

      Father,

      we love it here in the forest.

      Hansel’s got over it. I’ve learned to fish

      and shoot rabbits with home-made arrows.

      We’ve even built ourselves a house

      where the wolves can’t get us.

      But wolves don’t frighten us much

      even when they
    howl in the dark.

      With wolves, you know where you are.

      Cajun

      This is what I want –

      to be back again

      with the night to come –

      slipper-bags across our saddles

      how fast we rode

      and all for nothing.

      Your lips on his lips

      your hand in his hand

      as you went from the dance.

      We heard Mass at dawn,

      When I knelt for communion

      it was the hem of your white dress

      I felt in my mouth,

      it was your lips moving.

      This is all I want

      to be there again

      with the night to come –

      meet me where the fire

      lights the bayou

      watch my sweat shine

      as I play for you.

      It is for you I play

      my voice leaping the flames,

      if you don’t come

     


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