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    Opened Ground

    Page 5
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    Harbours no worse than razor-shell or crab –

      Though my father recalls carcasses of whales

      Collapsed and gasping, right up to the dunes.

      But tonight such moving sinewed dreams lie out

      In darker fathoms, far beyond the head.

      Astray upon a debris of scrubbed shells

      Between parched dunes and salivating wave,

      I have rights on this fallow avenue,

      A membrane between moonlight and my shadow.

      Limbo

      Fishermen at Ballyshannon

      Netted an infant last night

      Along with the salmon.

      An illegitimate spawning,

      A small one thrown back

      To the waters. But I’m sure

      As she stood in the shallows

      Ducking him tenderly

      Till the frozen knobs of her wrists

      Were dead as the gravel,

      He was a minnow with hooks

      Tearing her open.

      She waded in under

      The sign of her cross.

      He was hauled in with the fish.

      Now limbo will be

      A cold glitter of souls

      Through some far briny zone.

      Even Christ’s palms, unhealed,

      Smart and cannot fish there.

      Bye-Child

      He was discovered in the henhouse where she had confined him.

      He was incapable of saying anything.

      When the lamp glowed,

      A yolk of light

      In their back window,

      The child in the outhouse

      Put his eye to a chink –

      Little henhouse boy,

      Sharp-faced as new moons

      Remembered, your photo still

      Glimpsed like a rodent

      On the floor of my mind,

      Little moon man,

      Kennelled and faithful

      At the foot of the yard,

      Your frail shape, luminous,

      Weightless, is stirring the dust,

      The cobwebs, old droppings

      Under the roosts

      And dry smells from scraps

      She put through your trapdoor

      Morning and evening.

      After those footsteps, silence;

      Vigils, solitudes, fasts,

      Unchristened tears,

      A puzzled love of the light.

      But now you speak at last

      With a remote mime

      Of something beyond patience,

      Your gaping wordless proof

      Of lunar distances

      Travelled beyond love.

      Good-night

      A latch lifting, an edged den of light

      Opens across the yard. Out of the low door

      They stoop into the honeyed corridor,

      Then walk straight through the wall of the dark.

      A puddle, cobble-stones, jambs and doorstep

      Are set steady in a block of brightness.

      Till she strides in again beyond her shadows

      And cancels everything behind her.

      Fireside

      Always there would be stories of lights

      hovering among bushes or at the foot

      of a meadow; maybe a goat with cold horns

      pluming into the moon; a tingle of chains

      on the midnight road. And then maybe

      word would come round of that watery

      art, the lamping of fishes, and I’d be

      mooning my flashlamp on the licked black pelt

      of the stream, my left arm splayed to take

      a heavy pour and run of the current

      occluding the net. Was that the beam

      buckling over an eddy or a gleam

      of the fabulous? Steady the light

      and come to your senses, they’re saying good-night.

      Westering

      in California

      I sit under Rand McNally’s

      ‘Official Map of the Moon’ –

      The colour of frogskin,

      Its enlarged pores held

      Open and one called

      ‘Pitiscus’ at eye level –

      Recalling the last night

      In Donegal, my shadow

      Neat upon the whitewash

      From her bony shine,

      The cobbles of the yard

      Lit pale as eggs.

      Summer had been a free fall

      Ending there,

      The empty amphitheatre

      Of the west. Good Friday

      We had started out

      Past shopblinds drawn on the afternoon,

      Cars stilled outside still churches,

      Bikes tilting to a wall;

      We drove by,

      A dwindling interruption,

      As clappers smacked

      On a bare altar

      And congregations bent

      To the studded crucifix.

      What nails dropped out that hour?

      Roads unreeled, unreeled

      Falling light as casts

      Laid down

      On shining waters.

      Under the moon’s stigmata

      Six thousand miles away,

      I imagine untroubled dust,

      A loosening gravity,

      Christ weighing by his hands.

      from STATIONS (1975)

      Nesting-Ground

      The sandmartins’ nests were loopholes of darkness in the riverbank. He could imagine his arm going in to the armpit, sleeved and straitened, but because he had once felt the cold prick of a dead robin’s claw and the surprising density of its tiny beak he only gazed.

      He heard cheeping far in but because the men had once shown him a rat’s nest in the butt of a stack where chaff and powdered cornstalks adhered to the moist pink necks and backs he only listened.

      As he stood sentry, gazing, waiting, he thought of putting his ear to one of the abandoned holes and listening for the silence under the ground.

      July

      The drumming started in the cool of the evening, as if the dome of air were lightly hailed on. But no. The drumming murmured from beneath that drum.

      The drumming didn’t murmur, rather hammered. Soundsmiths found a rhythm gradually. On the far bench of the hills tuns and ingots were being beaten thin.

      The hills were a bellied sound-box resonating, a low dyke against diurnal roar, a tidal wave that stayed, that still might open.

      Through red seas of July the Orange drummers led a chosen people through their dream. Dilations and engorgings, contrapuntal; slashers in shirt-sleeves, collared in the sunset, policemen flanking them like anthracite.

      The air grew dark, cloud-barred, a butcher’s apron. The night hushed like a white-mothed reach of water, miles downstream from the battle, a skein of blood still lazing in the channel.

      England’s Difficulty

      I moved like a double agent among the big concepts.

      The word ‘enemy’ had the toothed efficiency of a mowing machine. It was a mechanical and distant noise beyond that opaque security, that autonomous ignorance.

      ‘When the Germans bombed Belfast it was the bitterest Orange parts were hit the worst.’

      I was on somebody’s shoulder, conveyed through the starlit yard to see the sky glowing over Anahorish. Grown-ups lowered their voices and resettled in the kitchen as if tired out after an excursion.

      Behind the blackout, Germany called to lamplit kitchens through fretted baize, dry battery, wet battery, capillary wires, domed valves that squeaked and burbled as the dial-hand absolved Stuttgart and Leipzig.

      ‘He’s an artist, this Haw Haw. He can fairly leave it into them.’

      I lodged with ‘the enemies of Ulster’, the scullions outside the walls. An adept at banter, I crossed the lines with carefully enunciated passwords, manned every speech with checkpoints and reported back to nobody.

      Visitant

      It kept treading air, as if it were a ghost with claims on us, precipitating in the heat tremor. Then, released from its distorting mirror,
    up the fields there comes this awkwardly smiling foreigner, awkwardly received, who gentled the long Sunday afternoon just by sitting with us.

      Where are you now, real visitant, who vivified ‘parole’ and ‘POW’? Where are the rings garnetted with bits of toothbrush, the ships in bottles, the Tyrol landscapes globed in electric bulbs?

      ‘They’ve hands for anything, these Germans.’

      He walked back into the refining lick of the grass, behind the particular judgements of captor and harbourer. As he walks yet, feeling our eyes on his back, treading the air of the image he achieved, released to his fatigues.

      Trial Runs

      WELCOME HOME YE LADS OF THE EIGHTH ARMY. There had to be some defiance in it because it was painted along the demesne wall, a banner headline over the old news of REMEMBER 1690 and NO SURRENDER, a great wingspan of lettering I hurried under with the messages.

      In a khaki shirt and brass-buckled belt, a demobbed neighbour leaned against our jamb. My father jingled silver deep in both pockets and laughed when the big clicking rosary beads were produced.

      ‘Did they make a Papish of you over there?’

      ‘Oh damn the fear! I stole them for you, Paddy, off the Pope’s dresser when his back was turned.’

      ‘You could harness a donkey with them.’

      Their laughter sailed above my head, a hoarse clamour, two big nervous birds dipping and lifting, making trial runs across a territory.

      The Wanderer

      In a semicircle we toed the line chalked round the master’s desk and on a day when the sun was incubating milktops and warming the side of the jam jar where the bean had split its stitches, he called me forward and crossed my palm with silver. ‘At the end of the holidays this man’s going away to Derry, so this is for him, for winning the scholarship … We all wish him good luck. Now, back to your places.’

      I have wandered far from that ring-giver and would not renegue on this migrant solitude. I have seen halls in flames, hearts in cinders, the benches filled and emptied, the circles of companions called and broken. That day I was a rich young man, who could tell you now of flittings, night-vigils, let-downs, women’s cried-out eyes.

      Cloistered

      Light was calloused in the leaded panes of the college chapel and shafted into the terrazzo rink of the sanctuary. The duty priest tested his diction against pillar and plaster, we tested our elbows on the hard bevel of the benches or split the gold-barred thickness of our missals.

      I could make a book of hours of those six years, a Flemish calendar of rite and pastime set on a walled hill. Look: there is a hillside cemetery behind us and across the river the plough going in a field and in between, the gated town. Here, an obedient clerk kissing a bishop’s ring, here a frieze of seasonal games, and here the assiduous illuminator himself, bowed to his desk in a corner.

      In the study hall my hand was cold as a scribe’s in winter. The supervisor rustled past, sibilant, vapouring into his breviary, his welted brogues unexpectedly secular under the soutane. Now I bisected the line AB, now found my foothold in a main verb in Livy. From my dormer after lights out I revised the constellations and in the morning broke the ice on an enamelled water-jug with exhilarated self-regard.

      The Stations of the West

      On my first night in the Gaeltacht the old woman spoke to me in English: ‘You will be all right.’ I sat on a twilit bedside listening through the wall to fluent Irish, homesick for a speech I was to extirpate.

      I had come west to inhale the absolute weather. The visionaries breathed on my face a smell of soup-kitchens, they mixed the dust of croppies’ graves with the fasting spittle of our creed and anointed my lips. Ephete, they urged. I blushed but only managed a few words.

      Neither did any gift of tongues descend in my days in that upper room when all around me seemed to prophesy. But still I would recall the stations of the west, white sand, hard rock, light ascending like its definition over Ranna-fast and Errigal, Annaghry and Kincasslagh: names portable as altar stones, unleavened elements.

      Incertus

      I went disguised in it, pronouncing it with a soft church-Latin c, tagging it under my efforts like a damp fuse. Uncertain. A shy soul fretting and all that. Expert obeisance.

      Oh yes, I crept before I walked. The old pseudonym lies there like a mouldering tegument.

      from NORTH (1975)

      Mossbawn: Two Poems in Dedication

      for Mary Heaney

      1 Sunlight

      There was a sunlit absence.

      The helmeted pump in the yard

      heated its iron,

      water honeyed

      in the slung bucket

      and the sun stood

      like a griddle cooling

      against the wall

      of each long afternoon.

      So, her hands scuffled

      over the bakeboard,

      the reddening stove

      sent its plaque of heat

      against her where she stood

      in a floury apron

      by the window.

      Now she dusts the board

      with a goose’s wing,

      now sits, broad-lapped,

      with whitened nails

      and measling shins:

      here is a space

      again, the scone rising

      to the tick of two clocks.

      And here is love

      like a tinsmith’s scoop

      sunk past its gleam

      in the meal-bin.

      2 The Seed Cutters

      They seem hundreds of years away. Brueghel,

      You’ll know them if I can get them true.

      They kneel under the hedge in a half-circle

      Behind a windbreak wind is breaking through.

      They are the seed cutters. The tuck and frill

      Of leaf-sprout is on the seed potatoes

      Buried under that straw. With time to kill,

      They are taking their time. Each sharp knife goes

      Lazily halving each root that falls apart

      In the palm of the hand: a milky gleam,

      And, at the centre, a dark watermark.

      Oh, calendar customs! Under the broom

      Yellowing over them, compose the frieze

      With all of us there, our anonymities.

      Funeral Rites

      I

      I shouldered a kind of manhood

      stepping in to lift the coffins

      of dead relations.

      They had been laid out

      in tainted rooms,

      their eyelids glistening,

      their dough-white hands

      shackled in rosary beads.

      Their puffed knuckles

      had unwrinkled, the nails

      were darkened, the wrists

      obediently sloped.

      The dulse-brown shroud,

      the quilted satin cribs:

      I knelt courteously

      admiring it all

      as wax melted down

      and veined the candles,

      the flames hovering

      to the women hovering

      behind me.

      And always, in a corner,

      the coffin lid,

      its nail-heads dressed

      with little gleaming crosses.

      Dear soapstone masks,

      kissing their igloo brows

      had to suffice

      before the nails were sunk

      and the black glacier

      of each funeral

      pushed away.

      II

      Now as news comes in

      of each neighbourly murder

      we pine for ceremony,

      customary rhythms:

      the temperate footsteps

      of a cortège, winding past

      each blinded home.

      I would restore

      the great chambers of Boyne,

      prepare a sepulchre

      under the cupmarked stones.

      Out of side-streets and by-roads

      purring family cars

      no
    se into line,

      the whole country tunes

      to the muffled drumming

      of ten thousand engines.

      Somnambulant women,

      left behind, move

      through emptied kitchens

      imagining our slow triumph

      towards the mounds.

      Quiet as a serpent

      in its grassy boulevard,

      the procession drags its tail

      out of the Gap of the North

      as its head already enters

      the megalithic doorway.

      III

      When they have put the stone

      back in its mouth

      we will drive north again

      past Strang and Carling fjords,

      the cud of memory

      allayed for once, arbitration

      of the feud placated,

      imagining those under the hill

      disposed like Gunnar

      who lay beautiful

      inside his burial mound,

      though dead by violence

      and unavenged.

      Men said that he was chanting

      verses about honour

      and that four lights burned

     


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