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    Counting Backwards

    Page 26
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      Its stones are taken for sheep-folds,

      your circle of hair

      hidden beneath the brambles.

      Bewick’s swans

      Ahead of us, moving through time

      with a skein’s precision and mystery

      over the navy spaces of winter

      the inter-continental migration continues.

      It starts on one moment

      of one season, when time ripens

      down to the soft dawn chill on a feather

      or the germ sprouting in winter wheat

      ready to be grazed by the wild swans.

      Hour by hour the birds move up the wedge

      until they fly at its point, in the keen

      apex, the buffet of wind.

      A dark triangle of birds streams backward

      and peels away and reforms like rain on glass.

      Sometimes they fall almost to the white waves

      then stretch their necks and call and begin

      the long pull onward, leaving a swan plunged

      like an untidy bundle of sheets

      swept in a ship’s backwash.

      See them nose the long coastline

      in a glide of perfected instinct.

      To their preferred feeding-grounds

      they are a long arrow

      shot from unimaginable nowhere.

      Here they are keeled, treading

      the known roughness of grass tussocks.

      The private swans arch out their feathers

      and preen and nourish themselves.

      The mild floodlights each night

      and people gathered to watch

      are no stranger to the swans than the prickle

      of green waiting in the wheat stripes each winter.

      The sea skater

      A skater comes to this blue pond,

      his worn Canadian skates

      held by the straps.

      He sits on the grass

      lacing stiff boots

      into a wreath of effort and breath.

      He tugs at the straps and they sound

      as ice does when weight troubles it

      and cracks bloom around stones

      creaking in quiet mid-winter

      mid-afternoons: a fine time for a skater.

      He knows it and gauges the sun

      to see how long it will be safe to skate.

      Now he hisses and spins in jumps

      while powder ice clings to the air

      but by trade he’s a long-haul skater.

      Little villages, stick-like in the cold,

      offer a child or a farm-worker

      going his round. These watch him

      go beating onward between iced alders

      seawards, and so they picture him

      always smoothly facing forward, foodless and waterless,

      mounting the crusted waves on his skates.

      In the tea house

      In the tea house the usual

      customers sit with their cooling

      tea glasses

      and new pastries

      sealed at the edge

      with sticky droplets.

      The waitress walks off,

      calves solid and shapely as vases,

      leaving a juicy baba

      before her favourite.

      Each table has bronze or white chrysanthemums

      and the copper glass-stands imperceptibly

      brush each other like crickets

      suddenly focussed at dusk,

      but the daily newspapers

      dampened by steam

      don’t rustle.

      The tea house still has its blinds out

      even though the sun is now amiably

      yellow as butter

      and people hurrying by raise up their faces

      without abandon, briskly

      talking to their companions;

      no one sits out at the tables

      except a travel-stained couple

      thumbing a map.

      The waitress reckons her cloths

      watching the proprietor

      while he, dark-suited, buoyant,

      pauses before a customer.

      Her gaze breaks upon the tea-house

      like incoming water

      joining sandbanks swiftly and

      softly moving the pebbles,

      moving the coloured sugar and coffee

      to better places,

      counting the pastries.

      Florence in permafrost

      Cold pinches the hills around Florence.

      It roots out vines, truffles for lemon trees

      painfully heated by charcoal

      to three degrees above freezing.

      A bristling fir forest

      moves forward over Tuscany.

      A secret wood

      riddled with worm and lifeless

      dust-covered branches

      stings the grass and makes it flowerless,

      freezing the long-closed eyelids of Romans.

      They sleep entrusted to darkness

      in the perpetual, placid, waveless

      music of darkness.

      The forest ramps over frontiers and plains

      and swallows voluble Customs men

      in slow ash. A wind sound

      scrapes its thatching of sticks.

      Blind thrushes in the wood blunder

      and drop onto the brown needles.

      There are no nests or singing-places.

      A forest of matchwood and cheap furniture

      marches in rows. Nobody harvests

      its spongey woods and makes the trunks sigh

      like toy soldiers giving up life.

      All over Italy and northward

      from fair Florence to München

      and the cold city of Potsdam

      the forest spreads like a pelt

      on meadows, terraces, riverbanks

      and the shards of brick houses.

      It hides everywhere from everywhere

      as each point of perspective

      is gained by herds of resinous firs.

      There may be human creatures

      at nest in the root sockets.

      They whicker words to each other

      against the soughing of evergreens

      while the great faces of reindeer

      come grazing beside the Arno.

      Missile launcher passing at night

      The soft fields part in hedges, each

      binds each, copse pleats

      rib up the hillside.

      Darkness is coming and grass

      bends downward.

      The cattle out all night

      eat, knee-deep, invisible

      unless a headlight arcs on their mild faces.

      The night’s damp fastens, droplet by droplet,

      onto the animals.

      They vibrate to the passing of a missile launcher

      and stir

      their patient eyelashes.

      A blackbird

      startled by floodlights

      reproduces morning.

      Cattle grids tremble and clang,

      boots scrape

      holly bursts against wet walls

      lost at the moment of happening.

      FROM

      The Apple Fall

      (1983)

      For my parents

      The marshalling yard

      In the goods yard the tracks are unmarked.

      Snow lies, the sky is full of it.

      Its hush swells in the dark.

      Grasped by black ice on black

      a massive noise of breathing

      fills the tracks;

      cold women, ready for departure

      smooth their worn skirts

      and ice steals through their hands like children

      from whose touch they have already been parted.

      Now like a summer

      the train comes

      beating the platform

      with its blue wings.

      The women stir. They sigh.

      Feet slide

      warm on a wooden sta
    irway

      then a voice calls and

      milk drenched with aniseed

      drawls on the walk to school.

      At last they leave.

      Their breathless neighbours

      steal from the woods, the barns,

      and tender straw

      sticks to their palms.

      A cow here in the June meadow

      A cow here in the June meadow

      where clouds pile, tower above tower.

      We lie, buried in sunburn,

      our picnic a warm

      paper of street tastes,

      she like a gold cloud

      steps, moony.

      Her silky rump dips

      into the grasses, buffeting

      a mass of seed ready to run off in flower.

      We stroll under the elder, smell

      wine, trace blackfly along its leaf-veins

      then burning and yawning we pile

      kisses onto the hot upholstery.

      Now evening shivers along the water surface.

      The cow, suddenly planted stands – her tender

      skin pollened all over –

      ready to nudge all night at the cold grasses,

      her udder heavily and more heavily swinging.

      Zelda

      At Great Neck one Easter

      were Scott

      Ring Lardner

      and Zelda, who sat

      neck high in catalogues like reading cards

      her hair in curl for

      wild stories, applauded.

      A drink, two drinks and a kiss.

      Scott and Ring both love her –

      gold-headed, sky-high Miss

      Alabama. (The lioness

      with still eyes and no affectations

      doesn’t come into this.)

      Some visitors said she ought

      to do more housework, get herself taught

      to cook.

      Above all, find some silent occupation

      rather than mess up Scott’s vocation.

      In France her barriers were simplified.

      Her husband developed a work ethic:

      film actresses; puritan elegance;

      tipped eyes spilling material

      like fresh Americas. You see

      said Scott they know about work, like me.

      You can’t beat a writer for justifying adultery.

      Zelda

      always wanted to be a dancer

      she said, writhing

      among the gentians that smelled of medicine.

      A dancer in a sweat lather is not beautiful.

      A dancer’s mind can get fixed.

      Give me a wooden floor, a practice dress,

      a sheet of mirrors and hours of labour

      and lie me with my spine to the floor

      supple secure.

      She handed these back too

      with her gold head and her senses.

      She asks for visits. She makes herself hollow

      with tears, dropped in the same cup.

      Here at the edge of her sensations

      there is no chance.

      Evening falls on her Montgomery verandah.

      No cars come by. Her only visitor

      his voice, slender along the telephone wire.

      Annunciation off East Street

      The window swings and squeaks in the sun.

      Mary says to the angel: ‘Come.

      My husband is sleepy.

      You’re rapid and warm-winged.’

      First Elizabeth, breathless,

      ties up her dates in her heart.

      How can a woman be so fortunate?

      ‘Precious baby,’ they write on her chart.

      Elizabeth the ageing primipara

      reminded of her ancestress Sarah

      who also slept with an old man.

      Bearded, whuffling,

      his flesh drew like chicken-skin.

      Mary sat with Elizabeth

      chopping up parsley, their breath

      pregnant, settling the room.

      Here Elizabeth crouched for six months

      uterus bubbling

      while Zacharias snipped the altar flame.

      ‘So it turns out at last.

      You and the holy spirit –

      I guessed it.

      We’re both gigantic

      at night, feeding our great babies.

      I gorge where no one can see me,

      count days, walk tiptoe

      still fearing the bloody trickle.’

      Mary answered her laughing:

      ‘Elizabeth, let’s tell them everything!’

      The Polish husband

      The traffic halted

      and for a moment

      the broad green avenue

      hung like a wave

      while a woman crossing

      stopped me and said

      ‘Can you show me my wedding?

      – In which church is it going to be held?’

      The lorries hooted at her

      as she stood there on the island

      for her cloak fell back

      and under it her legs were bare.

      Her hair was dyed blonde

      and her sad face deeply tanned.

      I asked her ‘What is the name of your husband?’

      She wasn’t sure, but she knew his first name was Joe,

      she’d met him in Poland

      and this was the time for the wedding.

      There was a cathedral behind us

      and a sign to the centre of the town.

      ‘I am not an expert on weddings,’

      I said, ‘but take that honey-coloured building

      which squats on its lawns like a cat –

      at least there’s music playing inside it.’

      So she ran with her heels tapping

      and the long, narrow folds of her cloak falling apart.

      A veil on wire flew from her head,

      her white figure ducked in the porch and blew out.

      But Joe, the Polish man. In the rush of this town

      I can’t say whether she even found him

      to go up the incense-heavy church beside him

      under the bridal weight of her clothes,

      or whether he was one of the lorry drivers

      to whom her brown, hurrying legs were exposed.

      The damson

      Where have you gone

      small child,

      the damson bloom

      on your eyes

      the still heap

      of your flesh

      lightly composed

      in a grey shawl,

      your skull’s pulse

      stains you,

      the veins slip deep.

      Two lights burn

      at the mouth of the cave

      where the air’s thin

      and the tunnels boom

      with your slippery blood.

      Your unripe cheeks cling

      to the leaves, to the wall,

      your grasp unpeels

      and your bruises murmur

      while blueness clouds

      on the down of your eyes,

      your tears erode

      and your smile files

      through your lips like a soldier

      who shoots at the sky

      and you flash up in silver;

      where are you now

      little one,

      peeled almond,

      damson bloom?

      In Rodmell Garden

      It’s past nine and breakfast is over.

      With morning frost on my hands I cross

      the white grass, and go nowhere.

      It’s icy: domestic. A grain

      of coffee burns my tongue. Its heat

      folds into the first cigarette.

      The garden and air are still.

      I am a stone and the world falls from me.

      I feel untouchable – a new planet

      where life knows it isn’t safe to begin.

      From silver flakes of ash I shape

      a fin and watch it with anguish.

      I hear app
    les rolling above me;

      November twigs; a bare existence –

      my sister is a marvellous

      dolphin, flanking her young.

      Her blood flushes her skin

      but mine is trapped. Occasional moments

      allow me to bathe in their dumb sweetness.

      My loose pips ripen. My night subsides

      rushing, like the long glide of an owl.

      Raw peace. A pale, frost-lit morning.

      The black treads of my husband on the lawn

      as he goes from the house to the loft

      laying out apples.

      The apple fall

      In a back garden I’m painting

      the outside toilet in shell and antelope.

      The big domestic bramley tree

      hangs close to me, rosy and leafless.

      Sometimes an apple thumps

      into the bushes I’ve spattered with turpentine

      while my brush moves with a suck

      over the burnt-off door frame.

      Towels from the massage parlour

      are out on the line next door:

      all those bodies sweating into them

     


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