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    Out of the Blue

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      Greenham Common, 80

      Hare in the snow, 229

      Hare in the snow cresting, 229

      ‘Has she gone then?’ they asked, 152

      Heimat, 199

      He is the one you can count on, 226

      He lived next door all his life, 227

      Here at my worktop, foil-wrapping a silver salmon, 228

      Here I am in the desert knowing nothing, 200

      Her fast asleep face turns from me, 86

      Heron, 177

      Herring girl, 58

      He’s going on holiday to lonely, 192

      Holiday to Lonely, 192

      How hushed the sentence is this morning, 43

      Hungry Thames, 244

      Hungry Thames, I walk over the bridge, 244

      I can’t say why so many coffin-makers, 46

      Ice coming, 20

      I’d climbed the crab-apple in the wind, 179

      If I wanted totems, in place of the poles, 218

      If no revolution come, 83

      If only, 38

      If only I’d stayed up till four in the morning, 38

      If you had said the words ‘to the forest’, 186

      I hung up the sheets in moonlight, 85

      I imagine you sent back from Africa, 98

      I know that no one dare judge another’s need, 230

      I lay and heard voices, 50

      In a back garden I’m painting, 69

      In a wood near Turku, 92

      In Berber’s Ice Cream Parlour, 184

      In deep water, 103

      I never stop listening to you sing, 237

      In memoriam Cyril Smith 1913–1945, 99

      In Rodmell Garden, 68

      In the chemist’s at night-time, 77

      In the corded hollows of the wood, 182

      In the Desert Knowing Nothing, 200

      In the goods yard the tracks are unmarked, 62

      In the tea house, 120

      In the tea house the usual, 120

      In the tents, 116

      In the weightlessness of time and our passage within it, 105

      In the white sheets I gave you, 205

      Inside out, 47

      I remember years ago, that we had Christmas roses, 91

      I see the boys at the breakwater, 167

      I should like to be buried in a summer forest, 233

      I should like to be buried in a summer forest, 233

      ‘It is finished,’ said Christ. Blood ebbed from his face, 22

      Its big red body ungulps, 211

      It’s evening on the river, 177

      It’s not the four-wheeled drive crawler, 136

      It’s past nine and breakfast is over, 68

      It starts with breaking into the wood, 55

      It was not always a dry well, 176

      It was the green lorry with its greasy curtain, 18

      It was too hot, that was the argument, 142

      It was you I heard, your tiger pad on the stairs, 45

      I’ve approached him since childhood, 99

      Jacob’s drum, 15

      Lady Macduff and the primroses, 104

      Lambkin, 149

      Landscape from the Monet Exhibition at Cardiff, 93

      Later my stepson will uncover a five-inch live shell, 135

      Lead me with your cold, sure hand, 190

      Lemon sole, 50

      Let us think that we are pilgrims, 155

      Little Ellie and the timeshare salesman, 245

      Long long have I looked for you, 54

      Lutherans, 187

      Malta, 153

      Mary Shelley, 105

      Missile launcher passing at night, 124

      Mr Lear has left a ring in his room, 39

      Mr Lear’s ring, 39

      Music plays gently. Yesterday’s morning paper, 249

      My nephews with almond faces, 79

      My sad descendants, 111

      My train halts in the snowfilled station, 93

      Near Dawlish, 86

      Nearly May Day, 168

      Need, 230

      New crops, 139

      Next door, 226

      Next door/is the same as ours, but different, 226

      Not going to the forest, 186

      Now I write off a winter of growth, 75

      Now the snowdrop, the wood-anemone, the crocus, 104

      Now winter comes and I am half-asleep, 244

      O engines, 139

      Of course they’re dead, or this is a film, 194

      Off the West Pier, 180

      Often when the bread tin is empty, 94

      Old Jeffery begins his night music, 144

      Old warriors and women, 31

      Ollie and Charles at St Andrew’s Park, 90

      On circuit from Heptonstall Chapel, 146

      One more for the beautiful table, 148

      One year he painted his front door yellow, 227

      One yellow chicken, 178

      On his skin the stink, 195

      On not writing certain poems, 162

      On smooth buttercup fields, 156

      On the white path at noon when the sun, 247

      O that old cinema of memory, 16

      Our day off, agreed by the wind, 116

      Out of the Blue, 12

      O wintry ones, my sad descendants, 111

      Patrick at four years old on Bonfire Night, 112

      Patrick, I cannot write, 72

      Patrick I, 72

      Patrick II, 73

      Pedalo, 207

      Permafrost, 133

      Pharaoh’s daughter, 70

      Piers Plowman: The Crucifixion & Harrowing of Hell, 22

      Pilgrims, 155

      Ploughing the roughlands, 136

      Poem for December 28, 79

      Poem for hidden women, 81

      Poem in a Hotel, 193

      Poem on the Obliteration of 100,000 Iraqi Soldiers, 201

      Porpoise washed up on the beach, 102

      Preaching at Gwennap, 145

      Preaching at Gwennap, silk, 145

      Privacy of rain, 163

      Rain. A plump splash, 163

      Rapunzel, 117

      Refrigerator days, 242

      Restless, the pæony truss tosses about, 132

      Rinsing, 182

      Rubbing Down the Horse, 197

      Russian doll, 59

      Safe period, 174

      Sailing to Cuba, 179

      Say we’re in a compartment at night, 36

      Scan at 8 weeks, 206

      Seal run, 128

      See this ’un here, this little bone needle, 58

      Shadows of my mother against a wall, 140

      She comes close to perfection, 37

      She kept Uncle Will’s telegram, 117

      She’s next to nowhere, feeling no cold, 236

      She swam to me smiling, her teeth, 207

      Ships on brown water, 32

      Sisters leaving before the dance, 160

      Skips, 218

      Sleeveless, 41

      Small, silvery, slipping, 248

      Smoke, 31

      Snowdrops, Mary’s tapers, 154

      Snow Queen, 54

      Snug a devil’s toenail embedded, 47

      So how decisive a house is, 71

      Sometimes in the rough garden of city spaces, 232

      Speak to me in the only language, 12

      St Paul’s, 78

      Sylvette Scrubbing, 215

      Tall ship hanging out at the horizon, 60

      Tea at Brandt’s, 249

      That lake lies along the shore, 164

      That morning when the potato tops rusted, 202

      That old cinema of memory, 16

      That’s better, he says, he says, 149

      That violet-haired lady, 52

      That violet-haired lady, dowager-, 52

      The air-blue gown, 109

      The apple fall, 69

      The argument, 142

      The bald glasshouses stretch here for miles, 143

      The bathers, where are they? The sea is quite empty, 166

      The Bike Lane, 194

    &n
    bsp; The blessing, 48

      The boy in the boat, the tip of the pole, 229

      The bride’s nights in a strange village, 96

      The butcher’s daughter, 56

      The coffin-makers, 46

      The conception, 205

      The cuckoo game, 55

      The damson, 67

      The deserted table, 88

      The Diving Reflex, 212

      The dream-life of priests, 158

      The dry glasshouse is almost empty, 143

      The dry well, 176

      The father is a writer; the son, 89

      The footfall, 45

      The form, 42

      The grass looks different in another country, 151

      The greenfield ghost, 57

      The greenfield ghost is not much of a ghost, 57

      The halls are thronged, the grand staircase murmurous, 48

      The hard-hearted husband, 152

      The haunting of Epworth, 144

      The horse landscape, 113

      The land pensions, 137

      The land pensions, like rockets, 137

      The last day of the exhausted month, 87

      The long arm hangs flat to his lap, 147

      The man on the roof, 13

      The man who gave little Ellie his forever, 245

      The mare with her short legs heavily mudcaked, 146

      The night chemist, 77

      The other babies were more bitter than you, 73

      The Our Father, the moment of fear, 203

      The panting of buses through caves of memory, 17

      The parachute packers, 100

      The parachute packers with white faces, 100

      The peach house, 143

      The plum tree, 108

      The plum was my parents’ tree, 108

      The point of not returning, 42

      The point of not returning/is to go back, but never quite back, 42

      The Polish husband, 66

      The potatoes come out of the earth bright, 128

      The rain’s coming in, 36

      The rain was falling down in slow pulses, 141

      There he stands, blind on slivovitz, 41

      There’s a stone set in the car-park wall, 19

      The room creaked like a pair of lungs, 177

      The scattering, 234

      The sea’s a featureless blaze, 153

      The sea skater, 119

      The sentence, 43

      The Silent Man in Waterstones, 220

      The slowly moving river in summer, 70

      The soft fields part in hedges, each, 124

      The spill, 34

      The summer cabins are padlocked, 92

      The surgeon husband, 228

      The thing about a saddle is that second, 197

      Thetis, 115

      Thetis, mother of all mothers, 115

      The traffic halted, 66

      The Wardrobe Mistress, 221

      The wasp, 244

      The white receiver, 206

      The winter fairs are all over, 91

      The wood-pigeon rolls soft notes off its breast, 140

      The writer’s son, 89

      They are hiding away in the desert, 201

      The Yellow Sky, 202

      They fly/straight-necked and barely white, 53

      This evening clouds darken the street quickly, 78

      This is Jacob’s drum, 15

      This is the wardrobe mistress, touching, 220

      This is what I want, 217

      This path is silky with dust, 204

      Those shady girls, 158

      Those shady girls on the green side of the street, 158

      Those words like oil, loose in the world, 34

      Three Ways of Recovering a Body, 191

      Three workmen with blue pails, 171

      Tiger lookout, 242

      Tiger Moth caterpillar, 243

      Time by Accurist, 219

      To Betty, swimming, 183

      Today in a horse landscape, 113

      Today is barred with darkness of winter, 80

      Tonight I’m eating the past, 109

      Tonight there’s a crowd in my head, 235

      To Virgil, 190

      Two miles or so beyond, 213

      Two of us on the tired pavement, 40

      Two spines curve in, 243

      Uncle Will’s telegram, 117

      Up at the park once more, 90

      US 1st Division Airborne Ranger at rest in Honduras, 147

      Viking cat in the dark, 238

      Virgin with Two Cardigans, 19

      Waiting. I’m here waiting, 193

      Walking at all angles, 14

      Washed silk jacket by Mesa, 219

      Weaning, 74

      We are men, not beasts, 250

      We’re strung out on the plain’s upthirst, 181

      What I get I bring home to you, 130

      When I held you up to my cheek you were cold, 59

      When my grandmother died my father

      eulogised her, 13

      When you grow tired of the flame, 240

      When You’ve Got, 222

      When you’ve got the plan of your life, 222

      Where have you been, my little daughter, 56

      Where have you gone, 67

      Where the great ship sank I am, 212

      Whichever way I turned on the radio, 187

      Whooper swans, 53

      Wild strawberries, 130

      Winter 1955, 181

      Winter fairs, 91

      With his hands he teaches wind to move, 241

      Without remission, 35

      With short, harsh breaths, 44

      You came back to life in its sweetness, 198

      You put your hand over mine and whispered, 162

      Your dry voice from the centre of the bed, 174

      You’re breast-up in the bubbling spaces you make for yourself, 183

      Zelda, 64

      Copyright

      Copyright © Helen Dunmore 1983, 1986, 1988, 1991, 1994, 1997, 2001

      First published 2001 by

      Bloodaxe Books Ltd,

      Highgreen,

      Tarset,

      Northumberland NE48 1RP.

      This ebook edition first published in 2011.

      www.bloodaxebooks.com

      For further information about Bloodaxe titles please visit our website or write to the above address for a catalogue.

      The right of Helen Dunmore to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with Section 77 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

      This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

      ISBN: 978 1 78037 009 5 ebook

     

     

     



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