Tuesday 31 December 2019

A poem for The Dead













Sorrows

He weighed six stone -
The size of my daughter, aged ten -
The skin baggy on the bone,
The meat of him gone.

Death reduces, like a good sauce.
A scrawny thing, a corpse -
Carries no weight, no remorse,
No apology, no applause.

And memory, eaten at by worms,
Claws at skeletons, at the marrow;
And grief struggles to find a form,
Scraping and picking and gnawing

At sorrows.

Sunday 29 December 2019

Welcoming the Slaughter, a poem on love and breakdown















Ben and Jane (an extract)

Jane has boxes for everything.

She keeps them under the bed,

In the bedroom of the house

In her head.

Her mother gave her the boxes;

Label them carefully, she said.

What kind of boxes? Egg boxes?

Tea chests?  Crates? 

She was anxious to get it right.

If you like. 

What kind of guidance was that?

Her first box was Anxiety:

A shoe box, big enough for boots;

They’d been in a sale;

They chafed her heels.

The lid didn’t fit.

 

She’d found the house in a memory,

Though she couldn’t remember it.

The front door,

Fanlighted, letter-boxed,

Its number an opaque code,

Leads to the stairs,

And off the landing is the bedroom,

Cluttered with boxes.

There is a window,

Its sill cluttered with boxes.

Light streams against the pane,

But the view is a blank,

As if the house were in a carwash.

 

The other rooms feel forbidding. 

She thinks there are lodgers,

Whom she may have met,

Or would have liked to.


Sometimes,

She hears their voices,

Soft, sociable noises,

The clink of glasses,

Murmured laughter;

 

Sometimes,

A nervous greeting:

The bleating of a small animal,

Welcoming the slaughter.

 

Other times,

When alone,

She sits on the bed

And imagines herself crying,

Wanting a mother for the daughter.



Friday 27 December 2019

Holding on? Or letting go? A poem
















Sedimentation

The years accumulate,
Are stacked and packed
Onto shelves that bend
With the weight that
Selves can barely bear;
Each volume printed,
Indexed, the pages uncut,
Stored against time,
In the library of us,
Undusted,
As if we could be read,
Could read, would read,
The diary we would keep,
Were there time,
Time to retreat, to start again.

And Time’s bending in the river’s flow:
The silted corners,
The stagnant oxbow lake,
The tributaries turned to backwater
Rush by now, glimpsed;
And all that fear and hope
Kicking against the current
That’s pulling us out to sea.
And what to say?
Tongue swollen with a brackish discontent
And life’s failures a wishbone in the throat.

The floods and droughts:
The ink running from the page,
Fading in the sun.
The time, the time …
The mind flails,
Swimming in the deep water of itself,
Or beached upon its own desolate shore.

Each day now begins blank, unwritten,
And closes so.
Each night the detritus settles, thickens,
And flowing slows.

And death opens its black, toothless mouth -
A lipless, estuary-wide smile -
And yawns.

Sunday 8 December 2019

Dark Atlas, poem











Dark Atlas

A map’s been nailed to the four corners of a round table.
There’s a key; there’s a scale; there are symbols:
Figures in a landscape, a path to follow;
Birds taking flight: an eagle, a swallow.
There is a route marked in red -
A river like an artery that has bled
Over mountain and forest to the ocean
Of our unknowing: a feeling, a prehension.
And somewhere in the dark atlas of the mind
Is the conceit in the relief of a journey that is signed.





Friday 29 November 2019

The Reader of Oneself, a poem on hope and loss

















Ex libris

Browsing on the bargain shelf …

A school book anthology whose leaves
Thickened the dust on the shelves
Of adolescent minds in Tottenville High,
Staten Island 7, N.Y.
I see cheerleaders – rah-rah skirts,
Thighs as pink, as firm, as prosthetics.
I see jocks, jaws as square as photo-fits,
Lettermen strutting in their varsity jackets,
Their skin a size too small for their musculature,
Their minds gripped by the image of pudenda clutched
In taut white panty-gussets; Feminine rime
Grinding against the masculine scheme.
Such urgent, relentless desires:
Dreams scored in flesh and fire.

Turned cold now.  Lost your bottle;
Hope’s sunk like a ship scuttled.
Doctors now, teachers, fathers and mothers;
Or drug addicts, alcoholics, death-row murderers.
And the poetry’s mostly gone from our lives,
The lust too, though, maybe, some love survives,
And for those who moved on, who were dauntless,
Perhaps, they’ve acquired some rhythmic, prosaic happiness.


… I reveal something cheap about myself. 



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Friday 22 November 2019

A four-letter word
















Home

When they go out and slam the door,
The house remains faithful
To their absence.

Surfaces insidiously gather dust,
A secret accretion blocking pores,
A skin hardening to indifference.

The curtains, impartial, as usual,
Will not be drawn, so the windows
Are left to frown upon light and shadow.

A tap, its mouth loose, drips, spittle
Calcifying and spreading the tittle-tattle of rust.

The clock unwinds, ticks, tocks
A touch more slowly or quickly,
Adjusts as its mood thins or thickens.

The fridge hums and then forgets
The tune, falling into a frigid sulk
With a juddering shudder.

The milk feels left out and sour,
Its jagged lips pouting.

Toast crumbs, ignored, foretell
Fortunes that still no one is reading.

The iron flirts with the idea of being left on,
Of wrinkles smoothed, of creases gone.

The TV, blind-eyed, remains on standby,
Soap operas stored, ready for replay.

The mirrors doze in unlidded sleep,
Dreaming the empty rooms,
With unbelieving eyes.

The alarm clock, awakened from a snooze,
Petulant and querulous, repeatedly peeps.

The photographs, held on pause,
And having cause to believe in their own story,
Stare, without memory, into the cold light of day.

The washing machine, on a dark wash program,
Matinees intimacy - Boxer’s Tangle with Tights!
Lights! Camera! Action!

Pyjamas, discarded and spastic,
Savour the heat and aroma
Of armpit and crotch.

Fragrances linger, a snatch of voices,
Scenting the foul air, where smells and noises
Commingle – a his and hers, a redolence
Of the bitter perfume of spilt coffee
And shattered crockery.

And where the echo of sharp words
Clashed like cutlery in a kitchen drawer,
Slashed at history like swords drawn,

The walls ache with silence.



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Saturday 16 November 2019

Still Life


Ballast

First of all, the furniture is rearranged,
Shifted here and there: a blunt knife
To cut light and shadow;
As if the complex architecture of their life
Could so simply be changed:
A sofa, a chair, a table by the window.

Still, it remains more Hopper than IKEA.

Next, they redecorate; take paint and brush,
Overlay the cold, stark, strident white
Of wall, cornice and ceiling
With pastels, warm, soft, hushed,
To quieten the hue and cry -
A camouflage, a toning down of feelings.

As if colour could cover and dilute the fear.

They move house - a last resort - their baggage
Packed, but it’s a ballast too heavy
To save them from the wreckage of truth,
A listing and sinking beyond salvage,
The deceit a wave spilling over the levee.
And love is a compass pointed north and south,

So the geography is a map that shreds and tears ...

A topographical tale that ends in tears.







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