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    The Whitsun Weddings

    Page 2
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      – An Odeon went past, a cooling tower,

      And someone running up to bowl – and none

      Thought of the others they would never meet

      Or how their lives would all contain this hour.

      I thought of London spread out in the sun,

      Its postal districts packed like squares of wheat:

      There we were aimed. And as we raced across

      Bright knots of rail

      Past standing Pullmans, walls of blackened moss

      Came close, and it was nearly done, this frail

      Travelling coincidence; and what it held

      Stood ready to be loosed with all the power

      That being changed can give. We slowed again,

      And as the tightened brakes took hold, there swelled

      A sense of falling, like an arrow-shower

      Sent out of sight, somewhere becoming rain.

      Self’s the Man

      Oh, no one can deny

      That Arnold is less selfish than I.

      He married a woman to stop her getting away

      Now she’s there all day,

      And the money he gets for wasting his life on work

      She takes as her perk

      To pay for the kiddies’ clobber and the drier

      And the electric fire,

      And when he finishes supper

      Planning to have a read at the evening paper

      It’s Put a screw in this wall –

      He has no time at all,

      With the nippers to wheel round the houses

      And the hall to paint in his old trousers

      And that letter to her mother

      Saying Won’t you come for the summer.

      To compare his life and mine

      Makes me feel a swine:

      Oh, no one can deny

      That Arnold is less selfish than I.

      But wait, not so fast:

      Is there such a contrast?

      He was out for his own ends

      Not just pleasing his friends;

      And if it was such a mistake

      He still did it for his own sake,

      Playing his own game.

      So he and I are the same,

      Only I’m a better hand

      At knowing what I can stand

      Without them sending a van –

      Or I suppose I can.

      Take One Home for the Kiddies

      On shallow straw, in shadeless glass,

      Huddled by empty bowls, they sleep:

      No dark, no dam, no earth, no grass –

      Mam, get us one of them to keep.

      Living toys are something novel,

      But it soon wears off somehow.

      Fetch the shoebox, fetch the shovel –

      Mam, we’re playing funerals now.

      Days

      What are days for?

      Days are where we live.

      They come, they wake us

      Time and time over.

      They are to be happy in:

      Where can we live but days?

      Ah, solving that question

      Brings the priest and the doctor

      In their long coats

      Running over the fields.

      MCMXIV

      Those long uneven lines

      Standing as patiently

      As if they were stretched outside

      The Oval or Villa Park,

      The crowns of hats, the sun

      On moustached archaic faces

      Grinning as if it were all

      An August Bank Holiday lark;

      And the shut shops, the bleached

      Established names on the sunblinds,

      The farthings and sovereigns,

      And dark-clothed children at play

      Called after kings and queens,

      The tin advertisements

      For cocoa and twist, and the pubs

      Wide open all day;

      And the countryside not caring:

      The place-names all hazed over

      With flowering grasses, and fields

      Shadowing Domesday lines

      Under wheat’s restless silence;

      The differently-dressed servants

      With tiny rooms in huge houses,

      The dust behind limousines;

      Never such innocence,

      Never before or since,

      As changed itself to past

      Without a word – the men

      Leaving the gardens tidy,

      The thousands of marriages

      Lasting a little while longer:

      Never such innocence again.

      Talking in Bed

      Talking in bed ought to be easiest,

      Lying together there goes back so far,

      An emblem of two people being honest.

      Yet more and more time passes silently.

      Outside, the wind’s incomplete unrest

      Builds and disperses clouds about the sky,

      And dark towns heap up on the horizon.

      None of this cares for us. Nothing shows why

      At this unique distance from isolation

      It becomes still more difficult to find

      Words at once true and kind,

      Or not untrue and not unkind.

      The Large Cool Store

      The large cool store selling cheap clothes

      Set out in simple sizes plainly

      (Knitwear, Summer Casuals, Hose,

      In browns and greys, maroon and navy)

      Conjures the weekday world of those

      Who leave at dawn low terraced houses

      Timed for factory, yard and site.

      But past the heaps of shirts and trousers

      Spread the stands of Modes For Night:

      Machine-embroidered, thin as blouses,

      Lemon, sapphire, moss-green, rose

      Bri-Nylon Baby-Dolls and Shorties

      Flounce in clusters. To suppose

      They share that world, to think their sort is

      Matched by something in it, shows

      How separate and unearthly love is,

      Or women are, or what they do,

      Or in our young unreal wishes

      Seem to be: synthetic, new,

      And natureless in ecstasies.

      A Study of Reading Habits

      When getting my nose in a book

      Cured most things short of school,

      It was worth ruining my eyes

      To know I could still keep cool,

      And deal out the old right hook

      To dirty dogs twice my size.

      Later, with inch-thick specs,

      Evil was just my lark:

      Me and my cloak and fangs

      Had ripping times in the dark.

      The women I clubbed with sex!

      I broke them up like meringues.

      Don’t read much now: the dude

      Who lets the girl down before

      The hero arrives, the chap

      Who’s yellow and keeps the store,

      Seem far too familiar. Get stewed:

      Books are a load of crap.

      As Bad as a Mile

      Watching the shied core

      Striking the basket, skidding across the floor,

      Shows less and less of luck, and more and more

      Of failure spreading back up the arm

      Earlier and earlier, the unraised hand calm,

      The apple unbitten in the palm.

      Ambulances

      Closed like confessionals, they thread

      Loud noons of cities, giving back

      None of the glances they absorb.

      Light glossy grey, arms on a plaque,

      They come to rest at any kerb:

      All streets in time are visited.

      Then children strewn on steps or road,

      Or women coming from the shops

      Past smells of different dinners, see

      A wild white face that overtops

      Red stretcher-blankets momently

      As it is carried in and stowed,

      And sense the so
    lving emptiness

      That lies just under all we do,

      And for a second get it whole,

      So permanent and blank and true.

      The fastened doors recede. Poor soul,

      They whisper at their own distress;

      For borne away in deadened air

      May go the sudden shut of loss

      Round something nearly at an end,

      And what cohered in it across

      The years, the unique random blend

      Of families and fashions, there

      At last begin to loosen. Far

      From the exchange of love to lie

      Unreachable inside a room

      The traffic parts to let go by

      Brings closer what is left to come,

      And dulls to distance all we are.

      The Importance of Elsewhere

      Lonely in Ireland, since it was not home,

      Strangeness made sense. The salt rebuff of speech,

      Insisting so on difference, made me welcome:

      Once that was recognised, we were in touch.

      Their draughty streets, end-on to hills, the faint

      Archaic smell of dockland, like a stable,

      The herring-hawker’s cry, dwindling, went

      To prove me separate, not unworkable.

      Living in England has no such excuse:

      These are my customs and establishments

      It would be much more serious to refuse.

      Here no elsewhere underwrites my existence.

      Sunny Prestatyn

      Come To Sunny Prestatyn

      Laughed the girl on the poster,

      Kneeling up on the sand

      In tautened white satin.

      Behind her, a hunk of coast, a

      Hotel with palms

      Seemed to expand from her thighs and

      Spread breast-lifting arms.

      She was slapped up one day in March.

      A couple of weeks, and her face

      Was snaggle-toothed and boss-eyed;

      Huge tits and a fissured crotch

      Were scored well in, and the space

      Between her legs held scrawls

      That set her fairly astride

      A tuberous cock and balls

      Autographed Titch Thomas, while

      Someone had used a knife

      Or something to stab right through

      The moustached lips of her smile.

      She was too good for this life.

      Very soon, a great transverse tear

      Left only a hand and some blue.

      Now Fight Cancer is there.

      First Sight

      Lambs that learn to walk in snow

      When their bleating clouds the air

      Meet a vast unwelcome, know

      Nothing but a sunless glare.

      Newly stumbling to and fro

      All they find, outside the fold,

      Is a wretched width of cold.

      As they wait beside the ewe,

      Her fleeces wetly caked, there lies

      Hidden round them, waiting too,

      Earth’s immeasurable surprise.

      They could not grasp it if they knew,

      What so soon will wake and grow

      Utterly unlike the snow.

      Dockery and Son

      ‘Dockery was junior to you,

      Wasn’t he?’ said the Dean. ‘His son’s here now.’

      Death-suited, visitant, I nod. ‘And do

      You keep in touch with –’ Or remember how

      Black-gowned, unbreakfasted, and still half-tight

      We used to stand before that desk, to give

      ‘Our version’ of ‘these incidents last night’?

      I try the door of where I used to live:

      Locked. The lawn spreads dazzlingly wide.

      A known bell chimes. I catch my train, ignored.

      Canal and clouds and colleges subside

      Slowly from view. But Dockery, good Lord,

      Anyone up today must have been born

      in ’43, when I was twenty-one.

      If he was younger, did he get this son

      At nineteen, twenty? Was he that withdrawn

      High-collared public-schoolboy, sharing rooms

      With Cartwright who was killed? Well, it just shows

      How much … How little … Yawning, I suppose

      I fell asleep, waking at the fumes

      And furnace-glares of Sheffield, where I changed,

      And ate an awful pie, and walked along

      The platform to its end to see the ranged

      Joining and parting lines reflect a strong

      Unhindered moon. To have no son, no wife,

      No house or land still seemed quite natural.

      Only a numbness registered the shock

      Of finding out how much had gone of life,

      How widely from the others. Dockery, now:

      Only nineteen, he must have taken stock

      Of what he wanted, and been capable

      Of … No, that’s not the difference: rather, how

      Convinced he was he should be added to!

      Why did he think adding meant increase?

      To me it was dilution. Where do these

      Innate assumptions come from? Not from what

      We think truest, or most want to do:

      Those warp tight-shut, like doors. They’re more a style

      Our lives bring with them: habit for a while,

      Suddenly they harden into all we’ve got

      And how we got it; looked back on, they rear

      Like sand-clouds, thick and close, embodying

      For Dockery a son, for me nothing,

      Nothing with all a son’s harsh patronage.

      Life is first boredom, then fear.

      Whether or not we use it, it goes,

      And leaves what something hidden from us chose,

      And age, and then the only end of age.

      Ignorance

      Strange to know nothing, never to be sure

      Of what is true or right or real,

      But forced to qualify or so I feel,

      Or Well, it does seem so:

      Someone must know.

      Strange to be ignorant of the way things work:

      Their skill at finding what they need,

      Their sense of shape, and punctual spread of seed,

      And willingness to change;

      Yes, it is strange,

      Even to wear such knowledge – for our flesh

      Surrounds us with its own decisions –

      And yet spend all our life on imprecisions,

      That when we start to die

      Have no idea why.

      Reference Back

      That was a pretty one‚ I heard you call

      From the unsatisfactory hall

      To the unsatisfactory room where I

      Played record after record, idly,

      Wasting my time at home, that you

      Looked so much forward to.

      Oliver’s Riverside Blues, it was. And now

      I shall, I suppose, always remember how

      The flock of notes those antique Negroes blew

      Out of Chicago air into

      A huge remembering pre-electric horn

      The year after I was born

      Three decades later made this sudden bridge

      From your unsatisfactory age

      To my unsatisfactory prime.

      Truly, though our element is time,

      We are not suited to the long perspectives

      Open at each instant of our lives.

      They link us to our losses: worse,

      They show us what we have as it once was,

      Blindingly undiminished, just as though

      By acting differently we could have kept it so.

      Wild Oats

      About twenty years ago

      Two girls came in where I worked –

      A bosomy English rose

      And her friend in specs I could talk to.

      Faces in those days sparked

     
    ; The whole shooting-match off, and I doubt

      If ever one had like hers:

      But it was the friend I took out,

      And in seven years after that

      Wrote over four hundred letters,

      Gave a ten-guinea ring

      I got back in the end, and met

      At numerous cathedral cities

      Unknown to the clergy. I believe

      I met beautiful twice. She was trying

      Both times (so I thought) not to laugh.

      Parting, after about five

      Rehearsals, was an agreement

      That I was too selfish, withdrawn,

      And easily bored to love.

      Well, useful to get that learnt.

      In my wallet are still two snaps

      Of bosomy rose with fur gloves on.

      Unlucky charms, perhaps.

      Essential Beauty

      In frames as large as rooms that face all ways

      And block the ends of streets with giant loaves,

      Screen graves with custard, cover slums with praise

      Of motor-oil and cuts of salmon, shine

      Perpetually these sharply-pictured groves

      Of how life should be. High above the gutter

      A silver knife sinks into golden butter,

      A glass of milk stands in a meadow, and

      Well-balanced families, in fine

      Midsummer weather, owe their smiles, their cars,

      Even their youth, to that small cube each hand

      Stretches towards. These, and the deep armchairs

      Aligned to cups at bedtime, radiant bars

      (Gas or electric), quarter-profile cats

     


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