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    Out of the Blue

    Page 9
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      I see it hump through the waves.

      Back in the tent it’s warm, wine-smelling,

      heavy with breath.

      The lamp shines on the bodies

      of our captain and his companion.

      These are the tented days I remember

      more than the battles.

      This is the smell of a herbal rub

      on great Achilles.

      This is the blue soap-scum on the pitcher,

      and cold parcels of goat-meat,

      the yawning moment

      late in the evening, when I step out

      and see the stars alight in their same places.

      Uncle Will’s telegram

      She kept Uncle Will’s telegram

      between the sheets of her wedding-album.

      Her life-long imaginary future

      dazzled the moment it came.

      He tried the counter-top biro

      and asked the post office clerk

      to check the time of arrival

      for ten words in block capitals.

      In the levelled-down churchyard

      they posed for the first photographs

      while powdery grandmothers

      whispered ‘We wish you’

      and came up with the word ‘Happiness’.

      She stood against laurel-black cherries

      while the church dived into silence,

      a great maritime creature

      leaving without echoes.

      At the lych-gate a tide-line

      of white flowers remained.

      In the Flowers the best man

      read Uncle Will’s telegram

      and the guests lifted their glasses

      shouting ‘Io, Io Hymen!’

      Rapunzel

      Rapunzel

      let down your hair,

      let your strong hair

      wind up the water you wish for.

      All your life looking down

      on bright tree-tops

      your days go by quickly.

      You read and you eat

      in your white tower top

      where sunlight fans through high

      windows and far below you

      bushes are matted with night.

      With soft thumbprints

      darkness muddles your pages.

      The prince arrives,

      whose noisy breathing

      and sweat as he vaults your window-sill

      draw you like wheat fields

      on the enchanted horizontal.

      He seeds your body with human fragments,

      dandruff, nail-clippings, dust.

      The detritus of new pleasures

      falls on your waxed boards.

      Your witch mother, sweeping them,

      sorrowfully banishes the girl

      who has let a prince clamber her.

      For six years you wander the desert

      from level to pale level.

      At night you make a bunker to sleep in

      near to the coyotes.

      The ragged prince plays blind-man’s-buff

      to the sound of your voice singing

      as you gather desert grasses

      in hollows hidden from him.

      Daily your wise mother

      unpicks the walls of the tower.

      Its stones are taken for sheep-folds,

      your circle of hair

      hidden beneath the brambles.

      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 fiel
    ds 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 RAW GARDEN

      (1988)

      Code-breaking in the Garden of Eden

      The Raw Garden is a collection of closely-related poems, which are intended to speak to, through, and even over each other. The poems draw their full effect from their setting; they feed from each other, even when the link is as mild as an echo of phrasing or cadence.

      It is now possible to insert new genes into a chromosomal pattern. It is possible to feed in new genetic material, or to remove what is seen as faulty or damaged material. The basic genetic code is contained in DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), and its molecular structure is the famous double helix, so called because it consists of two complementary spirals which match each other like the halves of a zip. Naturally-occurring enzymes can be used to split the double strand, and to insert new material. The separate strands are then recombined to form the complete DNA helix. By this process of gene-splicing a new piece of genetic information can be inserted into a living organism, and can be transmitted to the descendants of the organism.

      It seems to me that there is an echo of this new and revolutionary scientific process in the way each poet feeds from the material drawn together in a long poetic tradition, “breaks” it with his or her individual creative voice, and recombines it through new poems.

      One thing I have tried to do in these poems is to explore the effect which these new possibilities of genetic manipulation may have on our concept of what is natural and what is unnatural. If we can not follow Romantic poets in their assumption of a massive, unmalleable landscape which moulds the human creatures living upon it and provides them with a constant, stable frame of reference, then how do we look at landscape and at the “natural”? We are used to living in a profoundly human-made landscape. As I grew up I realised that even such apparently wild places as moors and commons were the product of human decisions and work: people had cut down trees, grazed animals, acquired legal rights. But still this knowledge did not interfere with my sense that these places were natural.

      The question might be, what does it take to disturb the sense of naturalness held by the human being in his or her, landscape? Is there a threshold beyond which a person revolts at a feeling that changedness has gone too far? Many of these poems focus on highly manipulated landscapes and outcrops of “nature”, and on the harmonies and revulsions formed between them and the people living among them.

      Perhaps the Garden of Eden embodies some yearning to print down an idea of the static and the predictable over our knowledge that we have to accept perpetual changeability. The code of the Garden of Eden has been broken open an infinite number of times. Now we are faced with a still greater potential for change, since we have acquired knowledge of the double helix structure of DNA. If the Garden of Eden really exists it does so moment by moment, fragmented and tough, cropping up like a fan of buddleia high up in the gutter of a deserted warehouse, or in a heap of frozen cabbages becoming luminous in the reflected light off roadside snow. This Garden of Eden propagates itself in strange ways, some of which find parallels in far-fetched horticultural techniques such as air layering, or growing potatoes in a mulch of rotted seaweed on white sand. I hope that these poems do not seem to hanker back to a prelapsarian state of grace. If I want to celebrate anything, it is resilience, adaptability, and the power of improvisation.

      Seal run

      The potatoes come out of the earth bright

      as if waxed, shucking their compost,

      and bob against the palm of my hand

      like the blunt muzzles of seals swimming.

      Slippy and pale in the washing-up bowl

      they bask, playful, grown plump

      in banks of seaweed on white sand,

      seaweed hauled from brown circles

      set in transparent waters off Easdale

      all through the sun-fanned West Highland midnights

      when the little potatoes are seeding there

      to make necklaces under the mulch,

      torques and amulets in their burial place.

      The seals quiver, backstroking

      for pure joy of it, down to the tidal

      slim mouth of the loch,

      they draw their lips back, their blunt whiskers

      tingle at the inspout of salt water

      then broaching the current they roll

      off between islands and circles of oarweed.

      At noon the sea-farmer

      turns back his blanket of weed

      and picks up potatoes like eggs

      from their fly-swarming nest,

      too fine for the sacks, so he puts them in boxes

      and once there they smell earthy.

      At noon the seals nose up the rocks

      to pile there, sun-dazed,

      back against belly, island on island.

      and sleep, shivering like dogs

      against the tug of the stream

      flowing on south past Campbelltown.

      The man’s hands rummage about still

      to find what is full-grown there.

      Masts on the opposite shore ring faintly

      disturbing themselves, and make him look up.

      Hands down and still moving

      he works on, his fingers at play blinded,

      his gaze roving the ripe sea-loch.

      Wild strawberries

      What I get I bring home to you:

      a dark handful, sweet-edged,

      dissolving in one mouthful.

      I bother to bring them for you

      though they’re so quickly over,

      pulpless, sliding to juice,

      a grainy rub on the tongue

      and the taste’s gone. If you remember

      we were in the woods at wild strawberry time

      and I was making a basket of dockleaves

      to hold what you’d picked,

      but the cold leaves unplaited themselves

      and slid apart, and again unplaited themselves

      until I gave up and ate wild strawberries

      out of your hands for sweetness.

      I lipped at your palm –

      the little salt edge there,

      the tang of money you’d handled.

      As we stayed in the wood, hidden,

      we heard the sound system below us

      calling the winners at Chepstow,

      faint as the breeze turned.

      The sun came out on us, the shade blotches

      went hazel: we heard names

      bubble like stock-doves over the woods

      as jockeys in stained silks gentled

      those sweat-dark, shuddering horses

      down to the walk.

      A mortgage on a pear tree

      A pear tree stands in its own maze.

      It does not close its blossom all night

      but holds out branchfuls of cool

      wide-open flowers. Its slim leaves look black

      and stir like tongues in the lamp-light.

      It was here before the houses were built.

      The owner grew wasteland and waited for values to rise.

      The builders swerved a boundary sideways

      to cup the tree in a garden. When they piled rubble

      it was a soft ca
    irn mounting the bole.

      The first owner of the raw garden

      came out and walked on the clay clods.

      There was the pear tree, bent down

      with small blunt fruits, each wide where the flower was,

      shaped like a medlar, but sweet.

      The ground was dense with fermenting pears,

      half trodden to pulp, half eaten.

      She could not walk without slipping.

      Slowly she walked in her own maze,

      sleepy, feeling the blood seep

      down her cold fingers, down the spread branch

      of veins which trails to the heart,

      and remembered how she’d stood under a tree

      holding out arms, with two school-friends.

      It was the fainting-game,

      played in the dinner-hour from pure boredom,

      never recalled since. For years this was growing

      to meet her, and now she’s signed for her own

      long mortgage over the pear tree

      and is the gainer of its accrued beauty,

      but when she goes into her bedroom

      and draws her curtains against a spring night

      the pear tree does not close its white blossom.

      The flowers stay open with slim leaves flickering around them:

     


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