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    Glad of These Times

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      We are the grown-ups, they the children

      sent to bed while the sun is shining,

      with a quilt to keep them warm.

      We are the clothed, and they the naked.

      Their dress of flesh has slipped off.

      If they had a shroud, it has rotted.

      We are old beside the purity of their hope,

      those drowned mariners

      anchored in salvation,

      we bring nothing but a stare

      of fickle, transient wonder,

      but they make their own flowers –

      a flush of primroses,

      dog violets, foxgloves

      taller than children, rusty montbretia –

      and at Christmas they give birth

      to the first daffodils

      startled from the earth.

      Getting into the car

      No, they won’t gather their white skirts

      before stooping to enter

      the deep-buttoned wedding car,

      having placed their flowers

      in the bridesmaid’s fingers,

      hand-tied, unravelling.

      They won’t wipe the delicate sweat

      of condensation, and wave

      one last time,

      no, not for them the fat-tyred Mercedes

      or mothers swooping to bless

      with tweaks and kisses.

      How the wedding car smells of skin

      and heat, and dry-cleaning of suits –

      but no, it will not happen.

      Girls, it is your fortune

      to be outside a club at 3 A.M.

      to be spangled and beautiful

      but to pick the wrong men,

      to get into the car with them

      and go where they are going

      over the black river, under the black river

      where your eyes will be wiped of sight

      and your bodies of breathing.

      Glad of these times

      Driving along the motorway

      swerving the packed lanes

      I am glad of these times.

      Because I did not die in childbirth

      because my children will survive me

      I am glad of these times.

      I am not hungry, I do not curtsey,

      I lock my door with my own key

      and I am glad of these times,

      glad of central heating and cable TV

      glad of e-mail and keyhole surgery

      glad of power showers and washing machines,

      glad of polio inoculations

      glad of three weeks’ paid holiday

      glad of smart cards and cashback,

      glad of twenty types of yoghurt

      glad of cheap flights to Prague

      glad that I work.

      I do not breathe pure air or walk green lanes,

      see darkness, hear silence,

      make music, tell stories,

      tend the dead in their dying

      tend the newborn in their birthing,

      tend the fire in its breathing,

      but I am glad of my times,

      these times, the age

      we feel in our bones, our rage

      of tyre music, speed

      annulling the peasant graves

      of all my ancestors,

      glad of my hands on the wheel

      and the cloud of grit as it rises

      where JCBs move motherly

      widening the packed motorway.

      Off-script

      No, not a demonstration,

      but each of us refusing

      to learn our part.

      The chorus dissolves

      in ragged voices.

      There is nothing for the director to work with.

      We are quietly talking

      off-script to one another –

      ‘Yes, rhubarb with ginger –’

      ‘Indeed we are all made from the dust of stars’

      They are building houses

      on rainwet fields

      where the smoke of horses

      has barely cleared –

      indeed we are all made from the dust of stars,

      even these houses are made from the dust of stars

      whose light gallops towards us –

      in the remotest corner

      of the black-wet universe

      there is a galaxy

      of bright horses –

      Tulip

      How cool the lovely bulb of your roundness.

      Bare-faced and sleek, you rise from your leaves.

      You have the skin of a raindrop.

      Blink, and your green flushes scarlet.

      Poised on the catwalk of spring, you’ll move

      in your own time, smile when you want to.

      Nothing comes up to you. Forget-me-nots

      crowd at your roots, my fingers

      hover, narcissi rustle

      but you are still. Only the sun touches you.

      Finger by finger it opens your petals

      loosens the lovely bulb of your roundness,

      makes you swagger in your exposure,

      knows, as you don’t, that it can’t last long.

      Beautiful today the

      banana plants, camellia, echium, wild garlic flower’s

      rank tang of a more northern spring,

      beautiful today the surf on Porthkidney Beach

      and the standing out of the lighthouse, sheer

      because of the rain past, the rain to come, the rain

      that has brought this cliff-side to jungle thickness.

      The hammock’s green with a winter of rain, beautiful today

      the bamboo, wrist-thick. Was it on this

      foothold, this shelf, this terrace, it learned

      to surf on a hiss of breeze, was it today

      that taught this dry handshake of leaves

      against the pull of tide on Porthkidney Beach?

      A step, a seat, a stare to the east

      where light springs from a wasteland

      beyond where the wet sun dawns –

      beautiful today, sun shakes from its shoulders

      the night tides. In a wasteland of easterly light

      sun makes play on the waves

      but the hollow surf turns over and over

      and nobody comes, only a track of footprints

      runs to the sea, and the tall pines

      make shapes of their limbs – beautiful today

      the dazzle they capture as landscape,

      the resin they ooze from their wounds.

      White planks are full of washed-away footsteps, beautiful

      today the graining of sweat and flesh. This shell

      wears at its heart a coil

      to last when the curves are gone – but today

      the flush of light, the flowering of freckles

      on tender skin are helplessly present

      in the hour between pallor and sunburn,

      while the banana plant wears its heart in a fist

      of tiny fruit that will never ripen or open.

      In the distance, the little town

      waits for its saint to sail in on a leaf

      for the second time, and bless its legion of roofs.

      Dead gull on Porthmeor

      You could use his wing as a fan

      to rid yourself of dreams,

      you could light a candle at midnight

      in the flooded beach hut

      and hear the wooden flute

      waver its music

      like a drop of rain

      into a storm,

      and the sea would prowl

      along the black-wet horizon

      and the sand would shine

      as white as corn

      ready for winnowing.

      Yes, you could use his wing as a fan.

      Narcissi

      Everything changes to black and white –

      the shaggy wreck of the Alba,

      the shine of the neap tide

      where the drowned funnels gulp for air

      and the waves break
    like narcissi,

      or the dog that skids to a stop, then quivers

      all over, shaking a floss of water

      to hide the Island.

      The sea begins to smell of flowers

      as the tide turns from its lair,

      the narcissi flake off one by one

      from that rust-bucket slumped in the sand –

      the Alba’s an old hand at drowning.

      I was two when they first plumped me down

      between Man’s Head and the Island

      where fox-trails of water ran out

      over Porthmeor strand.

      I smell something which reminds me

      of not being born,

      my mother walks on the shoreline

      a figure or maybe a figurehead

      with a smile of wood.

      In the big glare of the white day

      I clutch at the sand’s

      talkative hiss of grains,

      lose my balance, and suddenly

      scud on all fours

      into the narcissi.

      Dolphins whistling

      Yes, we believed that the oceans were endless

      surging with whales, serpents and mermaids,

      demon-haunted and full of sweet voices

      to lure us over the edge of the world,

      we were conquerors, pirates, explorers, vagabonds

      war-makers, sea-rovers, we ploughed

      the wave’s furrow, made maps

      that led others to the sea’s harvest

      and sometimes we believed we heard dolphins whistling,

      through the wine-dark waters we heard dolphins whistling.

      We were restless and the oceans were endless,

      rich in cod and silver-scaled herring

      so thick with pilchard we dipped in our buckets

      and threw the waste on the fields to rot,

      we were mariners, fishers of Iceland, Newfoundlanders

      fortune-makers, sea-rovers, we ploughed

      the wave’s furrow and earned our harvest

      hungrily trawling the broad waters,

      and sometimes we believed we heard dolphins whistling,

      through blue-green depths we heard dolphins whistling.

      The catch was good and the oceans were endless

      so we fed them with run-off and chemical rivers

      pair-fished them, scoured the sea-bed for pearls

      and searched the deep where the sperm-whale plays,

      we were ambergris merchants, fish farmers, cod-bank strippers

      coral-crushers, reef-poisoners, we ploughed

      the sea’s furrow and seized our harvest

      although we had to go far to find it

      for the fish grew small and the whales were strangers,

      coral was grey and cod-banks empty,

      algae bloomed and the pilchards vanished

      while the huer’s lookout was sold for a chalet,

      and the dolphins called their names to one another

      through the dark spaces of the water

      as mothers call their children at nightfall

      and grow fearful for an answer.

      We were conquerors, pirates, explorers, vagabonds

      war-makers, sea-rovers, we ploughed

      the wave’s furrow, drew maps

      to leads others to the sea’s harvest,

      and we believed that the oceans were endless

      and we believed we could hear the dolphins whistling.

      Borrowed light

      Such a connoisseur of borrowed light!

      Pale as a figurehead, undismayed

      by the rough footpath

      you climbed towards the view.

      At the top, silent, you would breathe in

      the spread of land you didn’t care to own,

      your face for a moment stern

      and rapt, careless of children.

      Such a connoisseur of borrowed light!

      Even when your voice grew harsh

      as those small stones rattling

      down the adder path,

      or when a January wind

      harried cloud shadows

      over the built-up valleys

      you would climb as far as that boulder

      where the view began,

      and watch its unravelling.

      You met equally

      the landscape knitting itself

      from russet, indigo

      and crawling tractors,

      or the blinding stare of the sea.

      A winter imagination

      Surely it’s not too much to ask

      from a winter imagination:

      the clattering of chairs onto a pavement

      the promptness of waiters before days waste them

      and of course, the flickering of leaves,

      the insouciant, constant

      rapture of following the breeze.

      Last night my daughter dreamed

      that we would die, mother and father

      gone while she stood watching.

      I soothed her in my arms, promised her husband,

      babies, troops of friends:

      like the defences of a vulnerable kingdom

      I named them, one by one. She slept rosily

      but for me the bone-cold passages

      still rang to her cry

      You’ll die and I’ll be alone.

      Surely it’s not too much to ask

      for a warm day to take away such dreams

      for violet, midge-haunted shadows

      under the sycamore that grows like a weed,

      for this year’s beautiful girls

      to flaunt their bellies, while the boys

      who won’t stop talking, trot to keep up.

      One of them is after my daughter

      but her lovely eyes are blue with distance.

      She is off at the gallop, dreamless.

      Athletes

      And what a load of leaf

      there was on the trees by June.

      From sticky fists

      rammed in the eye of the bud

      they’d opened wide,

      and when the wind blew

      the horse chestnuts were athletes

      running with torches of green

      in the half-marathon of summer.

      Pneumonia

      on our raft

      after the long night of storm

      the water bubbles

      the sea is calm

      the planks squeak lazily

      where the ropes chafe them

      the sea bulges

      ready to open

      why it should smell like jonquils

      no one knows

      the idling of the sun

      changes everything

      on our raft

      after the long night of storm

      the water bubbles

      eye-level

      why not watch it for ever

      Wall is the book

      (for Anne Stevenson)

      Wall is the book of these old lands

      each page scripted by stones,

      each lichen frond, orange or golden,

      wall’s stubborn illumination.

      Read wall slowly, for it takes time

      to grasp the sentence of stone.

      Wall breaks in a tumbled caesura

      of boulders. Read on

      where pucker of breeze on a tarn’s shield

      breaks the mirror of wall

      and bog cotton trembles. It rains

      on a draggle of sheep in the field

      where wall breaks the force

      and bite of steel from the north

      whence weather and danger come.

      Wall is the holy book of these old lands

      each age scripted by stone.

      Gorse

      All through sour soil the gorse thrusts.

      It is rough furze first, chopped to free the fields.

      Burned off in sheets of carbon, it lives

      down at the roots, grappling peat sponge,

      black as an eclipse of the sun.

      Bu
    t when the gorse is out of blossom

      kissing is then out of fashion.

      Like ill-fitting shoes, gorse flowers

      pinch and pinch until the sun touches them.

      Now in the lanes a spice of coconut,

      now the gorse thriving to wipe

      the eye of winter with a cloth of gold,

      now the bees in their bee kitchen

      pilot themselves above the spines,

      burrow past rapiers

      bumbling, lunge into flowers

      like drunks strangely kept safe

      in a world full of harms,

      and now it comes –

      a prickle of intricate buds

      a breath of perfume,

      a flare along the roadways, a torch

      barely mastered in the runner’s arms

      leaping the verges to set April alight.

     

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