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    Counting Backwards

    Page 4
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      You too will go down.

      February 12th 1994

      No one else remembers that room

      With the blood pressure cuff and the plastic cot

      And the bag on its stand dripping

      Millilitre by millilitre

      When the visitors had gone home

      And the tyres six storeys down

      Skidded, infrequent.

      Snow on the window ticked

      The glass, becoming sleet

      And the sheets for all their stains were white.

      No one else remembers that room

      Where you cried each time the lights

      Went off and the nurses were absent

      For hours by morphia time,

      I reached for you in pain

      And lifted you in your hospital nightgown

      To wedge you against me

      For we were both falling

      You with purple, dangling limbs

      Ecstatic, all lips

      And quick, hot breathing,

      I watching a nurse who did not exist

      Write her hieroglyphics

      As the snow thickened.

      I made a vow to you then

      In our solitude

      That you would never remember,

      With two fingers I smoothed the ruck

      Of the gown against your back.

      What shall I do for my sister in the day she shall be spoken for?

      I have a little sister, she has no breasts.

      I buy her face covering at the shop

      Where they have nearly run out.

      So, we are lucky. Black cloth sucks

      Into her nostrils. My sister screams.

      When she’s finished saying she can’t breathe

      When I’ve cleaned the snot from her face

      And rearranged her so she’ll be safe

      I say: It’s for your own good.

      Do as I do and walk close.

      I have a little sister, she has no breasts.

      She would like to be an ophthalmologist.

      When she was three she had a cyst

      Removed from under her left eyelid.

      I say: Don’t cry, you can still see out.

      I tell her to walk between me and the wall

      And keep her eyes downward. We scuttle

      Like crabs in a black wrapping.

      We shall buy rice, we shall go home.

      What shall I do for my sister

      In the day when she shall be spoken for?

      In Secret

      And this is where they met in secret.

      Follow my pointing finger. Now you see it

      Quite empty. Those curtains that veiled it

      Are rags, and the bed stripped bare.

      Here she played for him, there

      He placed his shoes in the corner.

      Piano from an upstairs room,

      Wanton extravagance of scales falling

      As we imagine birdsong –

      But only slow it down

      And hear the gong-repeat of a rhythm

      Like the treading of rubble over a woman.

      All the breaths of your life

      There is a gargoyle look when the mouth caves.

      No more words can be hoped for, the lips

      Are not for speaking, the tongue

      Is all sag and distortion.

      I might think that your kindness is effaced.

      No more look can be hoped for, your eyes

      Are not for seeing, the skin

      Is a drawn curtain over them.

      I hear your breath, now failing

      As all the breaths of your life become

      Petals endlessly opening

      Inward, where the dark is.

      Her children look for her

      Life and death are in the hands of God she said

      As a boat is in the hands of the dark water,

      And now her children look for her

      In the zizz of her sewing-machine each evening

      And the smell of cardamom.

      She said: life and death are in the hands of God.

      As the sun beat on the roof of the van

      She closed her eyes to dream,

      And her children look as the Pole Star goes up

      Close to the moon.

      Little papoose

      If I were the moon

      With a star papoose

      In the windy sky

      I’d carry my one star home,

      If I were the sea

      With boats in my arms

      On this cold morning

      I’d carry them,

      If I were sleeping

      And my dream turned

      I would carry you

      Little papoose

      Wherever you choose.

      Cliffs of Fall

      (to the memory of Gerard Manley Hopkins)

      Spring of turf and thrift, tangle of fleece, sheep-shit,

      Subtle flowers where honeybees knock

      At the foxglove lip and the gorse trap

      Then sheer on our left the drop. Spatter of bracken hooks

      Misleading the lambs. In the bank, marsh violets

      Wet, lovely, minute. We need not look for the fall, the chink

      Of pebble that tumbles. All the grey scree stirs

      Slip-rattles and stills itself. Here is the slope’s

      Angle, implacable. Here’s where you look

      Touch, unbalance, dislodge. Infinite drop

      Where the bee burrs at the foxglove’s lip,

      All quick-tongued, intimate.

      Time to step back to the wide margin

      Cleave to the path’s dapper attention

      Unspring each poem,

      Pitch each new note to the key of loss,

      Lose nothing. Stay clear of the drop

      Where the world bursts through its dirty glass.

      Sun on your neck, a dazzle of violets

      Infinitely slipsliding –

      No quick wing-beat of flight, but a slope

      Of gravel-rubble, its angle implacable

      stripping you raw. From here your fall

      Is a matter of form: a slow marvel.

      Five Versions from Catullus

      1 Through Babel of Nations

      Through babel of nations and waste of water

      I come my brother. What are these rites to us?

      Your ashes are speechless

      My words falter.

      Blind fate has taken you, brother,

      You and I are undone.

      The wine I bring you is spoiled

      With the salt of parting –

      What else can I give?

      Only a last greeting.

      2 Undone

      What you have done to me has undone me.

      You have led me so far from myself

      That my mind loses its bearings.

      Even if you shape-shifted

      To your best and dearest

      I couldn’t care for it. Dark love drives me on.

      3 Sirmio

      Almost island and jewel of all islands

      In lakes stiller than thought or in wild oceans

      Sweet or salt as the sea-god makes them,

      Sirmio,

      I see you, all of you, I take you in

      I see you, barely believing

      I’ve left those featureless, endless Bithynian plains.

      We travel over many waters

      To reach home-coming,

      Struggle and suffering over, the mind dissolved

      Of all its troubles, burdens laid down –

      The soft bed waits for our exhaustion.

      I see you, all of you, I know your

      Confusion of ripples against the lakeshore

      Welcoming laughter

      The sounds of home

      Ringing like masts in harbour:

      Sirmio.

      4 Dedication

      My slim volume, polished almost to nothing –

      Shall I dedicate it to you, Cornelius?

      You thought something of my songs

      Even th
    ough you were the only man in Italy

      Who could wrap up the world in three tomes

      Of flawless erudition.

      My God, your learning and labour

      Lean heavily against my little volume,

      So take my book, this fingernail’s width

      For what it’s worth.

      5 Sparrow

      Sparrow, my girl’s delight

      And plaything held to her breast,

      Sparrow whom she teases with one finger

      Daring your littleness to peck harder –

      Sparrow, I burn for her

      And crave the smallest crumb

      As the pair of you play

      Folded together in rapture

      Under one wing.

      I too long to comfort her

      In grief or oppressive longing –

      If only I could play with her as you do

      Until she forgets her soul’s sadness.

      Rim

      Here is the bowl. Do I want it still

      Chipped as it is and crazed,

      Its lustrous cream no longer running

      Over the body in fleet glaze,

      I’m getting rid, getting shot, cleansing

      Dark cupboards and fossil-deep

      Drawers lined with historic newspaper.

      I stop to read about the three-day-week.

      Here are gewgaws with tarnished clasps

      Here is the gravy-boat, the one item

      Surviving from the wedding service.

      Here’s Ted Heath’s improbable grin.

      I flick the rim and it gives back a tang –

      Yes, I remember that, the exact sound

      Of early curiosity and boredom.

      Bowl on my palm, I twist it round

      And round again, unsure.

      Do I hold or let it fall?

      On looking through the handle of a cup

      On looking through the handle of a cup

      I spied a nest of green: the spout

      Minus the can, a bunch of leaves

      Big as my hand: two trees

      In the palm of the wind,

      On looking through the hole made by a pin

      In a plane leaf twirled

      All ways to catch the world

      I saw a drop of rain, swollen

      On the petal of a rose,

      On looking through the fault in my eyes

      With their arrhythmias of vision

      I saw what no one has seen:

      My cup-handle of a world,

      My pinhole morning.

      Ten Books

      Jacketless, buckled, pressed from the voyage,

      Ten books that once were crated to America

      And back again,

      That have known the salt sea’s swing under them,

      Oil stink, the deep throb of the engines

      And quick hands putting them back on the shelves.

      Spines torn, the paper wartime, the Faber

      Font squarish and the dates in Roman:

      The Waste Land and other poems,

      Poems Newly Selected, Siegfried Sassoon –

      How that name conjured with me

      As a soldier kicked at a dead man.

      MacNeice, freckled with brown

      From many damps in many different houses.

      On the inner page, under my father’s autograph

      An early flourish of blue crayon

      Where I scribbled a figure so primitive

      There are not even legs for it to walk upon.

      Bowed, chipped, darkening, edge-worn

      Sunned, loose, fading

      Binding copy, reading copy, shaken:

      Ten books that I have taken.

      From the balcony on an August morning

      I see the rest fly to the tip lorry

      Where the sofa for a moment reposes

      Legs in the air, grinning.

      It is soaked through with music

      But nothing will save it.

      Behind it the sea makes the usual silveriness,

      The café opens and the bikes whizz

      From end to end of the promenade.

      Meanwhile in my father’s hand, a quotation

      On the title page of Herbert Read’s

      Thirty-Five Poems: ‘I absorbed Blake,

      His strange beauty, his profound message,

      His miraculous technique, and to emulate

      Blake was to be my ambition

      And my despair…’ (Faber and Faber,

      24 Russell Square.) I see my own hands

      Smooth and small as they are not now

      Lifting, turning, ‘I am amazed

      To find how much I owe to him.’

      Subtraction

      You always thought that you’d die mid-stride,

      Sun on your left hand, darkness

      Crossing you out in one swipe.

      When you got on to subtraction

      It was easy-peasy. Add one

      At the top, take one from the next column.

      Good at take-away, good at adding,

      Revving up for the 11-plus

      But no mathematician,

      You stumbled upon infinity

      With infinite terror, and knew

      The limits of divinity –

      What you’d been told was wrong.

      If all you loved had been given

      Then all could be taken.

      You knew then that you must blot

      In the blue notebook, trim

      With happy pencil, the sum

      Of what is when it is not.

      My people

      My people are the dying,

      I am of their company

      And they are mine,

      We wake in the wan hour

      Between three and four,

      Listen to the rain

      And consider our painkillers.

      I lie here in the warm

      With four pillows, a light

      And the comfort of my phone

      On which I sometimes compose,

      And the words come easily

      Bubbling like notes

      From a bird that thinks it is dawn.

      My people are the dying.

      I reach out to them,

      A company of suffering.

      One falls by the roadside

      And a boot stamps on him,

      One lies in her cell, alone,

      Without tenderness

      Brutally handled

      Towards her execution.

      I can do nothing.

      This is my vigil: the lit candle,

      The pain, the breath of my people

      Drawn in pain.

      September Rain

      Always rain, September rain,

      The slipstream of the season,

      Night of the equinox, the change.

      There are three surfers out back.

      Now the rain’s pulse is doubled, the wave

      Is not to be caught. Are they lost in the dark

      Do they know where the coast is combed with light

      Or is there only the swell, lifting

      Back to the beginning

      When they ran down the hill like children

      Through this rain, September rain,

      And the sea opened its breast to them?

      I lie and listen

      And the life in me stirs like a tide

      That knows when it must be gone.

      I am on the deep deep water

      Lightly held by one ankle

      Out of my depth, waiting.

      Hold out your arms

      Death, hold out your arms for me

      Embrace me

      Give me your motherly caress,

      Through all this suffering

      You have not forgotten me.

      You are the bearded iris that bakes its rhizomes

      Beside the wall,

      Your scent flushes with loveliness,

      Sherbet, pure iris

      Lovely and intricate.

      I am the child who stands by the wall

      Not much taller than the iris.


      The sun covers me

      The day waits for me

      In my funny dress.

      Death, you heap into my arms

      A basket of unripe damsons

      Red crisscross straps that button behind me.

      I don’t know about school,

      My knowledge is for papery bud covers

      Tall stems and brown

      Bees touching here and there, delicately

      Before a swerve to the sun.

      Death stoops over me

      Her long skirts slide,

      She knows I am shy.

      Even the puffed sleeves on my white blouse

      Embarrass me,

      She will pick me up and hold me

      So no one can see me,

      I will scrub my hair into hers.

      There, the iris increases

      Note by note

      As the wall gives back heat.

      Death, there’s no need to ask:

      A mother will always lift a child

      As a rhizome

      Must lift up a flower

      So you settle me

      My arms twining,

      Thighs gripping your hips

      Where the swell of you is.

      As you push back my hair

      – Which could do with a comb

     


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