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    How the Hell Are You

    Page 4
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      not for anything just hopeful

      we’ll be hopeful if you find us

      we’ll be hopeful if you never find us

      you who go in search

      with a lantern and a staff

      through the dark that you consider

      to be dark we have departed

      and we bless your tiny lantern

      from a distance none alive can fathom

      Death Comes To Everyman

      I hie me to the last-night party

      show I’d not played any part in

      hadn’t even got around to

      catching don’t to this day know what

      play it was.

      Encounter at the last-night party

      jubilant and brimming actors

      watch them reach the end of jokes they

      start to ask me what I’d reckoned

      to their show

      they’re marking with a last-night party

      let’s derail them with a story

      all about them they don’t know I

      get them clinking in a dream-world

      gives me time

      to sail on through the last-night party

      if I might just there excuse me

      you were last to pop the question

      in a blue-lit bathroom doorway –

      who are you

      what brings you to the last-night party

      friend of a friend are you or someone’s

      other half were you backstage? – I

      raise my phantom glass and cry

      To Theatre!

      Advice To The Players

      Don’t play the ending. You don’t know this tale

      is written down. You’ve no idea out there

      in shadow shadows watch our long travail,

      some even care, some don’t

      don’t play the ending.

      Don’t play the ending. Sure you’re in Act Five

      and five is all you get, the time is short,

      whenever you’re pretending this is LIVE,

      whatever sort of scene

      it is it’s ending.

      Don’t play the ending though the players you love

      are mostly playing bodies now, effects

      have burned the set down and there’s not enough

      stage-time left to save

      the wretch you’re playing.

      Don’t play the ending though the General’s here

      for the one line he’s been practising, his mask

      is pouting on the shelf, don’t play the fear,

      don’t play the risk you take

      don’t play what’s next

      don’t play it, though the automatic crowds

      who saw the light with one almighty click

      are milling in the wings, don’t say the words

      the dead have picked for Time

      to learn by rote.

      Go free, don’t play the ending, go free,

      as if your final scene is where we meet

      at last! with neither prompt nor point nor story,

      beyond a greeting nothing

      but the open road,

      let’s not be fated to, or cursed or blessed

      or hinted at, the plot has tried to part us

      but the plot is chalked beneath our feet, and dust

      has always let us by

      without a word.

      Let’s not be acted, let’s not be rehearsed,

      some fool has tried to mean with us, let’s not

      mean, let’s turn our backs and do the rest

      out of earshot, eyeline,

      out of mind,

      Elizabethans then and now, the old crew

      finished for the day, in silhouette

      beside the river boozing, while the view

      turns gold and lets us go

      in our own sweet time.

      Thinks It’s All There Is

      As far as I can see that’s everyone.

      So thanks for that but where else would you be.

      Whatever came or went has come and gone

      without you why would you not turn to me.

      Look I too turned to me I’m just like you.

      Stuff came and went but nothing really took.

      So this became what else there was to do.

      This became where else there was to look.

      This became the language that is spoken

      here and here became the only spot.

      Here I sense I’m only silence broken.

      Here I sing because I see what’s not

      is almost back. It’s frightening, I had plans.

      You might have warned me. Hold my hand, both hands –

      One Gone Rogue

      No one made me, nothing did. I do

      get these faces sailing close a while

      who seem to see a soul in me like you

      and settle their old features to a smile

      of all in this together I hate that.

      No one made me, nothing did. You can’t

      meet some stranger over me I’m what

      tinder for you what I’m talking point

      I’m no one’s. Clock me and I clock the fuck

      right back at you I’ve never been begun.

      I was never worked on why would I take work

      and who would do it? you with the summer gone

      and your book in the dead of night you want to try it?

      Or me who knows me hasn’t it gone quiet.

      Love Sonnet Left Behind

      Brought to light they say I was by one

      the maker wanted with him now. Not now

      as in at once but when this work was done.

      Which meant he had to pass through me somehow

      to get to her was it a her? don’t know

      my back was turned. The maker was a he

      I know for sure though it’s so long ago.

      A woman didn’t make me, look at me.

      A woman would have lifted me from this

      fixture I was nailed to on that day.

      Borne me away and set me down in bliss

      somewhere he’ll never find me somewhere grey

      the many shades of mercy. Somewhere you

      who I was made for will be hiding too.

      ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

      Some of these poems, or versions of them, first appeared in Ambit, Art & Letters, the Guardian, the New Yorker, Poetry London, Poetry Review, Sewanee Review, the Spectator and the Times Literary Supplement.

      ‘The White’ and ‘The Heyday’ were contributions to The Voice and The Echo, in homage to, respectively, George Herbert and John Donne, performed in 2015 in the Sam Wanamaker Theatre at Shakespeare’s Globe; ‘Pasolini’s Satan’ was a contribution to an evening of poems inspired by the films of Pier Paulo Pasolini, curated by Simon Barrowclough; ‘Song Of Until’ was set to music by David Bruce and performed by primary school choirs to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Voices Foundation; ‘Page Of First Old Book He Read’ was a contribution to Off The Shelf: A Celebration of Bookshops in Verse, edited by Carol Ann Duffy (Picador, 2016); ‘Plainsong Of The Undiscovered’ arose from Connections, a Science and Poetry collaboration with Dr Amber Ruigrok, organized by Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge.

      How the hell are you

      Glyn Maxwell has won several awards for his poetry, including the Somerset Maugham Prize, the E. M. Forster Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize. His work has been shortlisted for the Forward, Costa and T. S. Eliot Prizes. Many of his plays have been staged in the UK and USA, and he has written libretti for several major operas. He is the author of On Poetry, a general reader’s guide to the craft, and Drinks with Dead Poets, its fictional sequel.

      ALSO BY GLYN MAXWELL

      Poetry

      The Boys At Twilight (Poems 1990–95)

      The Breakage Time’s Fool

      The Nerve The Sugar Mile Hide Now

      One Thousand Nights and Counting (Poems 1990–2010)

      Pluto

      Pla
    ys

      PLAYS ONE: The Lifeblood, Wolfpit, The Only Girl In the World

      PLAYS TWO: Broken Journey, Best Man Speech, The Last Valentine

      PLAYS THREE: Alice In Wonderland, Wind in The Willows, Merlin and the Woods Of Time

      THREE VERSE PLAYS: The Birthday Ball of Zelda Nein, Gnyss The Magnificent, Last Crossing Of Isolde

      Cyrano De Bergerac Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde

      The Forever Waltz Liberty

      Masters Are You Mad? Mimi and the Stalker

      Libretti

      The Lion’s Face Seven Angels

      Travelogue

      Moon Country (with Simon Armitage)

      Fiction

      Drinks With Dead Poets

      Criticism

      On Poetry

      First published 2020 by Picador

      This electronic edition first published 2020 by Picador

      an imprint of Pan Macmillan

      6 Briset Street, London EC1M 5NR

      Associated companies throughout the world

      www.panmacmillan.com

      ISBN 978-1-5290-3774-6

      Copyright © Glyn Maxwell 2020

      Cover image: © Stanley Greene/NOOR

      Cover design: Lucy Scholes,

      Picador Art Department

      The right of Glyn Maxwell to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

      The verse in ‘Bluebirds Over’ is an extract from ‘There’ll Be Bluebirds over the White Cliffs of Dover’ by Nat Burton / Walter Kent lyrics © Shapiro Bernstein & Co. Inc., Walter Kent Music Company.

      You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damage.

      A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

      Visit www.picador.com to read more about all our books and to buy them. You will also find features, author interviews and news of any author events, and you can sign up for e-newsletters so that you’re always first to hear about our new releases.

     

     

     



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