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    100 Poems

    Page 6
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      The Haw Lantern

      The wintry haw is burning out of season,

      crab of the thorn, a small light for small people,

      wanting no more from them but that they keep

      the wick of self-respect from dying out,

      not having to blind them with illumination.

      But sometimes when your breath plumes in the frost

      it takes the roaming shape of Diogenes

      with his lantern, seeking one just man;

      so you end up scrutinized from behind the haw

      he holds up at eye-level on its twig,

      and you flinch before its bonded pith and stone,

      its blood-prick that you wish would test and clear you,

      its pecked-at ripeness that scans you, then moves on.

      From the Republic of Conscience

      I

      When I landed in the republic of conscience

      it was so noiseless when the engines stopped

      I could hear a curlew high above the runway.

      At immigration, the clerk was an old man

      who produced a wallet from his homespun coat

      and showed me a photograph of my grandfather.

      The woman in customs asked me to declare

      the words of our traditional cures and charms

      to heal dumbness and avert the evil eye.

      No porters. No interpreter. No taxi.

      You carried your own burden and very soon

      your symptoms of creeping privilege disappeared.

      II

      Fog is a dreaded omen there but lightning

      spells universal good and parents hang

      swaddled infants in trees during thunderstorms.

      Salt is their precious mineral. And seashells

      are held to the ear during births and funerals.

      The base of all inks and pigments is seawater.

      Their sacred symbol is a stylized boat.

      The sail is an ear, the mast a sloping pen,

      the hull a mouth-shape, the keel an open eye.

      At their inauguration, public leaders

      must swear to uphold unwritten law and weep

      to atone for their presumption to hold office –

      and to affirm their faith that all life sprang

      from salt in tears which the sky-god wept

      after he dreamt his solitude was endless.

      III

      I came back from that frugal republic

      with my two arms the one length, the customs woman

      having insisted my allowance was myself.

      The old man rose and gazed into my face

      and said that was official recognition

      that I was now a dual citizen.

      He therefore desired me when I got home

      to consider myself a representative

      and to speak on their behalf in my own tongue.

      Their embassies, he said, were everywhere

      but operated independently

      and no ambassador would ever be relieved.

      The Stone Verdict

      When he stands in the judgement place

      With his stick in his hand and the broad hat

      Still on his head, maimed by self-doubt

      And an old disdain of sweet talk and excuses,

      It will be no justice if the sentence is blabbed out.

      He will expect more than words in the ultimate court

      He relied on through a lifetime’s speechlessness.

      Let it be like the judgement of Hermes,

      God of the stone heap, where the stones were verdicts

      Cast solidly at his feet, piling up around him

      Until he stood waist-deep in the cairn

      Of his absolution: maybe a gate-pillar

      Or a tumbled wallstead where hogweed earths the silence

      Somebody will break at last to say, ‘Here

      His spirit lingers,’ and will have said too much.

      from Clearances

      in memoriam M.K.H., 1911–1984

      3

      When all the others were away at Mass

      I was all hers as we peeled potatoes.

      They broke the silence, let fall one by one

      Like solder weeping off the soldering iron:

      Cold comforts set between us, things to share

      Gleaming in a bucket of clean water.

      And again let fall. Little pleasant splashes

      From each other’s work would bring us to our senses.

      So while the parish priest at her bedside

      Went hammer and tongs at the prayers for the dying

      And some were responding and some crying

      I remembered her head bent towards my head,

      Her breath in mine, our fluent dipping knives –

      Never closer the whole rest of our lives.

      7

      In the last minutes he said more to her

      Almost than in all their life together.

      ‘You’ll be in New Row on Monday night

      And I’ll come up for you and you’ll be glad

      When I walk in the door … Isn’t that right?’

      His head was bent down to her propped-up head.

      She could not hear but we were overjoyed.

      He called her good and girl. Then she was dead,

      The searching for a pulsebeat was abandoned

      And we all knew one thing by being there.

      The space we stood around had been emptied

      Into us to keep, it penetrated

      Clearances that suddenly stood open.

      High cries were felled and a pure change happened.

      The Wishing Tree

      I thought of her as the wishing tree that died

      And saw it lifted, root and branch, to heaven,

      Trailing a shower of all that had been driven

      Need by need by need into its hale

      Sap-wood and bark: coin and pin and nail

      Came streaming from it like a comet-tail

      New-minted and dissolved. I had a vision

      Of an airy branch-head rising through damp cloud,

      Of turned-up faces where the tree had stood.

      from The Cure at Troy

      Human beings suffer.

      They torture one another.

      They get hurt and get hard.

      No poem or play or song

      Can fully right a wrong

      Inflicted and endured.

      History says, Don’t hope

      On this side of the grave,

      But then, once in a lifetime

      The longed-for tidal wave

      Of justice can rise up,

      And hope and history rhyme.

      So hope for a great sea-change

      On the far side of revenge.

      Believe that a farther shore

      Is reachable from here.

      Believe in miracles

      And cures and healing wells.

      Call miracle self-healing,

      The utter self-revealing

      Double-take of feeling.

      If there’s fire on the mountain

      And lightning and storm

      And a god speaks from the sky

      That means someone is hearing

      The outcry and the birth-cry

      Of new life at its term.

      It means once in a lifetime

      That justice can rise up

      And hope and history rhyme.

      Markings

      I

      We marked the pitch: four jackets for four goalposts,

      That was all. The corners and the squares

      Were there like longitude and latitude

      Under the bumpy ground, to be

      Agreed about or disagreed about

      When the time came. And then we picked the teams

      And crossed the line our called names drew between us.

      Youngsters shouting their heads off in a field

      As the light died and they kept on playing

      Because by then they were playing in their heads

    &n
    bsp; And the actual kicked ball came to them

      Like a dream heaviness, and their own hard

      Breathing in the dark and skids on grass

      Sounded like effort in another world …

      It was quick and constant, a game that never need

      Be played out. Some limit had been passed,

      There was fleetness, furtherance, untiredness

      In time that was extra, unforeseen and free.

      II

      You also loved lines pegged out in the garden,

      The spade nicking the first straight edge along

      The tight white string. Or string stretched perfectly

      To make the outline of a house foundation,

      Pale timber battens set at right angles

      For every corner, each freshly sawn new board

      Spick and span in the oddly passive grass.

      Or the imaginary line straight down

      A field of grazing, to be ploughed open

      From the rod stuck in one headrig to the rod

      Stuck in the other.

      III

      All these things entered you

      As if they were both the door and what came through it.

      They marked the spot, marked time and held it open.

      A mower parted the bronze sea of corn.

      A windlass hauled the centre out of water.

      Two men with a cross-cut kept it swimming

      Into a felled beech backwards and forwards

      So that they seemed to row the steady earth.

      Seeing Things

      I

      Inishbofin on a Sunday morning.

      Sunlight, turfsmoke, seagulls, boatslip, diesel.

      One by one we were being handed down

      Into a boat that dipped and shilly-shallied

      Scaresomely every time. We sat tight

      On short cross-benches, in nervous twos and threes,

      Obedient, newly close, nobody speaking

      Except the boatmen, as the gunwales sank

      And seemed they might ship water any minute.

      The sea was very calm but even so,

      When the engine kicked and our ferryman

      Swayed for balance, reaching for the tiller,

      I panicked at the shiftiness and heft

      Of the craft itself. What guaranteed us –

      That quick response and buoyancy and swim –

      Kept me in agony. All the time

      As we went sailing evenly across

      The deep, still, seeable-down-into water,

      It was as if I looked from another boat

      Sailing through air, far up, and could see

      How riskily we fared into the morning,

      And loved in vain our bare, bowed, numbered heads.

      II

      Claritas. The dry-eyed Latin word

      Is perfect for the carved stone of the water

      Where Jesus stands up to his unwet knees

      And John the Baptist pours out more water

      Over his head: all this in bright sunlight

      On the façade of a cathedral. Lines

      Hard and thin and sinuous represent

      The flowing river. Down between the lines

      Little antic fish are all go. Nothing else.

      And yet in that utter visibility

      The stone’s alive with what’s invisible:

      Waterweed, stirred sand-grains hurrying off,

      The shadowy, unshadowed stream itself.

      All afternoon, heat wavered on the steps

      And the air we stood up to our eyes in wavered

      Like the zig-zag hieroglyph for life itself.

      III

      Once upon a time my undrowned father

      Walked into our yard. He had gone to spray

      Potatoes in a field on the riverbank

      And wouldn’t bring me with him. The horse-sprayer

      Was too big and new-fangled, bluestone might

      Burn me in the eyes, the horse was fresh, I

      Might scare the horse, and so on. I threw stones

      At a bird on the shed roof, as much for

      The clatter of the stones as anything,

      But when he came back, I was inside the house

      And saw him out the window, scatter-eyed

      And daunted, strange without his hat,

      His step unguided, his ghosthood immanent.

      When he was turning on the riverbank,

      The horse had rusted and reared up and pitched

      Cart and sprayer and everything off balance

      So the whole rig went over into a deep

      Whirlpool, hoofs, chains, shafts, cartwheels, barrel

      And tackle, all tumbling off the world,

      And the hat already merrily swept along

      The quieter reaches. That afternoon

      I saw him face to face, he came to me

      With his damp footprints out of the river,

      And there was nothing between us there

      That might not still be happily ever after.

      1. I. 87

      Dangerous pavements.

      But I face the ice this year

      With my father’s stick.

      Field of Vision

      I remember this woman who sat for years

      In a wheelchair, looking straight ahead

      Out the window at sycamore trees unleafing

      And leafing at the far end of the lane.

      Straight out past the TV in the corner,

      The stunted, agitated hawthorn bush,

      The same small calves with their backs to wind and rain,

      The same acre of ragwort, the same mountain.

      She was steadfast as the big window itself.

      Her brow was clear as the chrome bits of the chair.

      She never lamented once and she never

      Carried a spare ounce of emotional weight.

      Face to face with her was an education

      Of the sort you got across a well-braced gate –

      One of those lean, clean, iron, roadside ones

      Between two whitewashed pillars, where you could see

      Deeper into the country than you expected

      And discovered that the field behind the hedge

      Grew more distinctly strange as you kept standing

      Focused and drawn in by what barred the way.

      from Glanmore Revisited

      VII The Skylight

      You were the one for skylights. I opposed

      Cutting into the seasoned tongue-and-groove

      Of pitch pine. I liked it low and closed,

      Its claustrophobic, nest-up-in-the-roof

      Effect. I liked the snuff-dry feeling,

      The perfect, trunk-lid fit of the old ceiling.

      Under there, it was all hutch and hatch.

      The blue slates kept the heat like midnight thatch.

      But when the slates came off, extravagant

      Sky entered and held surprise wide open.

      For days I felt like an inhabitant

      Of that house where the man sick of the palsy

      Was lowered through the roof, had his sins forgiven,

      Was healed, took up his bed and walked away.

      A Pillowed Head

      Matutinal. Mother-of-pearl

      Summer come early. Slashed carmines

      And washed milky blues.

      To be first on the road,

      Up with the ground-mists and pheasants.

      To be older and grateful

      That this time you too were half-grateful

      The pangs had begun – prepared

      And clear-headed, foreknowing

      The trauma, entering on it

      With full consent of the will.

      (The first time, dismayed and arrayed

      In your cut-off white cotton gown,

      You were more bride than earth-mother

      Up on the stirrup-rigged bed,

      Who were self-possessed now

      To the point of a walk on the pier

      Before you checked in.)

     
    ; And then later on I half-fainted

      When the little slapped palpable girl

      Was handed to me; but as usual

      Came to in two wide-open eyes

      That had been dawned into farther

      Than ever, and had outseen the last

      Of all of those mornings of waiting

      When your domed brow was one long held silence

      And the dawn chorus anything but.

      Fosterling

      ‘That heavy greenness fostered by water’

      JOHN MONTAGUE

      At school I loved one picture’s heavy greenness –

      Horizons rigged with windmills’ arms and sails.

      The millhouses’ still outlines. Their in-placeness

      Still more in place when mirrored in canals.

      I can’t remember not ever having known

      The immanent hydraulics of a land

      Of glar and glit and floods at dailigone.

      My silting hope. My lowlands of the mind.

      Heaviness of being. And poetry

      Sluggish in the doldrums of what happens.

      Me waiting until I was nearly fifty

      To credit marvels. Like the tree-clock of tin cans

      The tinkers made. So long for air to brighten,

      Time to be dazzled and the heart to lighten.

      from Lightenings

      viii

      The annals say: when the monks of Clonmacnoise

     


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