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    The Cinnamon Peeler

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    a man who roared on an island for ten years,

      whose body grew banal

      while he stayed humane

      behind the black teeth and withering hair.

      Imagine in his hands – black

      from the dried blood of animals,

      a bow of torn silver

      that noised arrows loose like a wild heart;

      in front of him – Paris

      darting and turning, the perfumed stag,

      and beyond him the sun

      netted in the hills, throwing back his shape,

      until the running spider of shadow

      gaped on the bandaged foot of the standing man

      who let shafts of eagles into the ribs

      that were moving to mountains.

      PHILOCTETES ON THE ISLAND

      Sun moves broken in the trees

      drops like a paw

      turns sea to red leopard

      I trap sharks and drown them

      stuffing gills with sand

      cut them with coral till

      the blurred grey runs

      red designs.

      And kill to fool myself alive

      to leave all pity on the staggering body

      in order not to shoot an arrow up

      and let it hurl

      down through my petalling skull

      or neck vein, and lie

      heaving round the wood in my lung.

      That the end of thinking.

      Shoot either eye of bird instead

      and run and catch it in your hand.

      One day a bird went mad

      flew blind along the beach

      smashed into a dropping wave

      out again and plummeted.

      Later knocked along the shore.

      To slow an animal

      you break its foot with a stone

      so two run wounded

      reel in the bush, flap

      bodies at each other

      till free of forest

      it gallops broken in the sand,

      then use a bow

      and pin the tongue back down its throat.

      With wind the rain wheels like a circus hoof,

      aims at my eyes, rakes up the smell of animals

      of stone moss, cleans me.

      Branches fall like nightmares in the dark

      till sun breaks up

      and spreads wound fire at my feet

      then they smell me,

      the beautiful animals

      ELIZABETH

      Catch, my Uncle Jack said

      and oh I caught this huge apple

      red as Mrs Kelly’s bum.

      It’s red as Mrs Kelly’s bum, I said

      and Daddy roared

      and swung me on his stomach with a heave.

      Then I hid the apple in my room

      till it shrunk like a face

      growing eyes and teeth ribs.

      Then Daddy took me to the zoo

      he knew the man there

      they put a snake around my neck

      and it crawled down the front of my dress.

      I felt its flicking tongue

      dripping onto me like a shower.

      Daddy laughed and said Smart Snake

      and Mrs Kelly with us scowled.

      In the pond where they kept the goldfish

      Philip and I broke the ice with spades

      and tried to spear the fishes;

      we killed one and Philip ate it,

      then he kissed me

      with raw saltless fish in his mouth.

      My sister Mary’s got bad teeth

      and said I was lucky, then she said

      I had big teeth, but Philip said I was pretty.

      He had big hands that smelled.

      I would speak of Tom, soft laughing,

      who danced in the mornings round the sundial

      teaching me the steps from France, turning

      with the rhythm of the sun on the warped branches,

      who’d hold my breast and watch it move like a snail

      leaving his quick urgent love in my palm.

      And I kept his love in my palm till it blistered.

      When they axed his shoulders and neck

      the blood moved like a branch into the crowd.

      And he staggered with his hanging shoulder

      cursing their thrilled cry, wheeling,

      waltzing in the French style to his knees

      holding his head with the ground,

      blood settling on his clothes like a blush;

      this way

      when they aimed the thud into his back.

      And I find cool entertainment now

      with white young Essex, and my nimble rhymes.

      She said, ‘What about Handy? Think I should send it to him?’

      ‘He’s supposed to call in a little while. I’ll ask him.’

      ‘He retired, didn’t he?’

      ‘Yes.’

      She waited and then said, ‘Say something, Parker. God to get you to gossip, it’s like pulling teeth.’

      ‘Handy retired.’ Parker said.

      ‘I know he retired! Tell me about it. Tell me why he retired, tell me where he is, how’s he doing. Talk to me, Parker, goddamit.’

      RICHARD STARK, The Sour Lemon Score

      DATES

      It becomes apparent that I miss great occasions.

      My birth was heralded by nothing

      but the anniversary of Winston Churchill’s marriage.

      No monuments bled, no instruments

      agreed on a specific weather.

      It was a seasonal insignificance.

      I console myself with my mother’s eighth month.

      While she sweated out her pregnancy in Ceylon

      a servant ambling over the lawn

      with a tray of iced drinks,

      a few friends visiting her

      to placate her shape, and I

      drinking the life lines,

      Wallace Stevens sat down in Connecticut

      a glass of orange juice at his table

      so hot he wore only shorts

      and on the back of a letter

      began to write ‘The Well Dressed Man with a Beard’.

      That night while my mother slept

      her significant belly cooled

      by the bedroom fan

      Stevens put words together

      that grew to sentences

      and shaved them clean and

      shaped them, the page suddenly

      becoming thought where nothing had been,

      his head making his hand

      move where he wanted

      and he saw his hand was saying

      the mind is never finished, no, never

      and I in my mother’s stomach was growing

      as were the flowers outside the Connecticut windows.

      BILLBOARDS

      ‘Even his jokes were exceedingly drastic.’

      My wife’s problems with husbands, houses,

      her children that I meet

      at stations in Kingston, in Toronto, in London Ontario

      – they come down the grey steps

      bright as actors after their drugged four hour ride

      of spilled orange juice and comics.

      Reunions for Easter egg hunts.

      Kite flying. Christmases.

      All this, I was about to say,

      invades my virgin past.

      When she was beginning

      this anthology of kids

      I moved – blind but for senses

      jutting faux pas, terrible humour,

      shifted with a sea of persons,

      breaking when necessary

      into smaller self sufficient bits of mercury.

      My mind a carefully empty diary

      till I hit the barrier reef

      that was my wife—

                               there

      the right bright fish

      among the coral.

      With her came the locusts of history—

      innuendoes she ha
    d missed

      varied attempts at seduction

      dogs who had been bred

      and killed by taxis or brain disease,

      Here was I trying to live

      with a neutrality so great

      I’d have nothing to think about.

      Nowadays I get the feeling

      I’m in a complex situation,

      one of several billboard posters

      blending in the rain.

      I am writing this with a pen my wife has used

      to write a letter to her first husband.

      On it is the smell of her hair.

      She must have placed it down between sentences

      and thought, and driven her fingers round her skull

      gathered the slightest smell of her head

      and brought it back to the pen.

      LETTERS & OTHER WORLDS

      ‘for there was no more darkness for him and, no doubt like Adam before the fall, he could see in the dark’

                               My father’s body was a globe of fear

                               His body was a town we never knew

                               He hid that he had been where we were going

                               His letters were a room he seldom lived in

                               In them the logic of his love could grow

                               My father’s body was a town of fear

                               He was the only witness to its fear dance

                               He hid where he had been that we might lose him

                               His letters were a room his body scared

      He came to death with his mind drowning.

      On the last day he enclosed himself

      in a room with two bottles of gin, later

      fell the length of his body

      so that brain blood moved

      to new compartments

      that never knew the wash of fluid

      and he died in minutes of a new equilibrium.

      His early life was a terrifying comedy

      and my mother divorced him again and again.

      He would rush into tunnels magnetized

      by the white eye of trains

      and once, gaining instant fame,

      managed to stop a Perahara in Ceylon

      – the whole procession of elephants dancers

      local dignitaries – by falling

      dead drunk onto the street.

      As a semi-official, and semi-white at that,

      the act was seen as a crucial

      turning point in the Home Rule Movement

      and led to Ceylon’s independence in 1948.

      (My mother had done her share too—

      her driving so bad

      she was stoned by villagers

      whenever her car was recognized)

      For 14 years of marriage

      each of them claimed he or she

      was the injured party.

      Once on the Colombo docks

      saying goodbye to a recently married couple

      my father, jealous

      at my mother’s articulate emotion,

      dove into the waters of the harbour

      and swam after the ship waving farewell.

      My mother pretending no affiliation

      mingled with the crowd back to the hotel.

      Once again he made the papers

      though this time my mother

      with a note to the editor

      corrected the report – saying he was drunk

      rather than broken hearted at the parting of friends.

      The married couple received both editions

      of The Ceylon Times when their ship reached Aden.

      And then in his last years

      he was the silent drinker,

      the man who once a week

      disappeared into his room with bottles

      and stayed there until he was drunk

      and until he was sober.

      There speeches, head dreams, apologies,

      the gentle letters, were composed.

      With the clarity of architects

      he would write of the row of blue flowers

      his new wife had planted,

      the plans for electricity in the house,

      how my half-sister fell near a snake

      and it had awakened and not touched her.

      Letters in a clear hand of the most complete empathy

      his heart widening and widening and widening

      to all manner of change in his children and friends

      while he himself edged

      into the terrible acute hatred

      of his own privacy

      till he balanced and fell

      the length of his body

      the blood entering

      the empty reservoir of bones

      the blood searching in his head without metaphor.

      GRIFFIN OF THE NIGHT

      I’m holding my son in my arms

      sweating after nightmares

      small me

      fingers in his mouth

      his other fist clenched in my hair

      small me

      sweating after nightmares.

      BIRTH OF SOUND

      At night the most private of a dog’s long body groan.

      It comes with his last stretch

      in the dark corridor outside our room.

      The children turn.

      A window tries to split with cold

      the other dog hoofing the carpet for lice.

      We’re all alone.

      WE’RE AT THE GRAVEYARD

      Stuart Sally Kim and I

      watching still stars

      or now and then sliding stars

      like hawk spit to the trees.

      Up there the clear charts,

      the systems’ intricate branches

      which change with hours and solstices,

      the bone geometry of moving from there, to there.

      And down here – friends

      whose minds and bodies

      shift like acrobats to each other.

      When we leave, they move

      to an altitude of silence.

      So our minds shape

      and lock the transient,

      parallel these bats

      who organize the air

      with thick blinks of travel.

      Sally is like grey snow in the grass.

      Sally of the beautiful bones

      pregnant below stars.

      NEAR ELGINBURG

      3 a.m. on the floor mattress.

      In my pyjamas a moth beats frantic

      my heart is breaking loose.

      I have been dreaming of a man

      who places honey on his forehead before sleep

      so insects come tempted by liquid

      to sip past it into the brain.

      In the morning his head contains wings

      and the soft skeletons of wasp.

      Our suicide into nature.

      That man’s seduction

      so he can beat the itch

      against the floor and give in

      move among the sad remnants

      of those we have destroyed,

      the torn code these animals ride to death on.

      Grey fly on windowsill

      white fish by the dock

      heaved like a slimy bottle into the deep,

      to end up as snake

      heckled by children and cameras

      as he crosses lawns of civilization.

      We lie on the floor mattress

      lost moths walk on us

      waterhole of flesh, want

      thi
    s humiliation under the moon.

      Till in the morning we are surrounded

      by dark virtuous ships

      sent by the kingdom of the loon.

      LOOP

      My last dog poem.

      I leave behind all social animals

      including my dog who takes

      30 seconds dismounting from a chair.

      Turn to the one

      who appears again on roads

      one eye torn out and chasing.

      He is only a space filled

      and blurred with passing,

      transient as shit – will fade

      to reappear somewhere else.

      He survives the porcupine, cars, poison,

      fences with their spasms of electricity.

      Vomits up bones, bathes at night

      in Holiday Inn swimming pools.

      And magic in his act of loss.

      The missing eye travels up

      in a bird’s mouth, and into the sky.

      Departing family. It is loss only of flesh

      no more than his hot spurt across a tree.

      He is the one you see at Drive-Ins

      tearing silent into garbage

      while societies unfold in his sky.

      The bird lopes into the rectangle nest of images

      and parts of him move on.

      HERON REX

      Mad kings

      blood lines introverted, strained pure

      so the brain runs in the wrong direction

      they are proud of their heritage of suicides

      – not just the ones who went mad

      balancing on that goddamn leg, but those

      whose eyes turned off

      the sun and imagined it

      those who looked north, those who

      forced their feathers to grow in

      those who couldn’t find the muscles in their arms

      who drilled their beaks into the skin

      those who could speak

      and lost themselves in the foul connections

      who crashed against black bars in a dream of escape

      those who moved round the dials of imaginary clocks

     

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