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    Night Photograph

    Page 4
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      14 by the absolute stillness

      15 that comes only with not knowing

      16 how fast you are going. As you fall

      17 in orbit around the earth, remember

      18 your language. Listen to star dust.

      19 Trust your fear.

      Suspension

      1 Two hundred and forty-five feet above the mud,

      2 I play with the story of the bridge's construction.

      3 How Brunel, in his early twenties,

      4 was a half-drowned invalid hiding in Bristol,

      5 looking for a way to win back faith

      6 after the collapse of his tunnel under the Thames.

      7 I curl over the railings, unable to grasp

      8 the push-and-pull dynamics of Brunel's success,

      9 a puzzle for my building-brick perceptions.

      10 He used secondhand chains to hold up a seven-

      11 hundred-foot span. He was a sick man.

      12 It is safer to look away from the light

      13 and test the vertigo that comforts those

      14 who come here to die. It is a popular spot

      15 and the road below has to be protected

      16 by a shelf described as a ‘body stop’.

      17 I stay on the bridge, laugh at its ghosts,

      18 make jokes about accident and suicide;

      19 then I start to accept Brunel's equation,

      20 the simplicity holding it all in place.

      21 Now it looks too easy, I can't go on,

      22 my sense of balance is suddenly lost

      23 along with my ignorance, the framework of

      24 the physics of what keeps us from falling.

      Night Photograph

      1 Crossing the Channel at midnight in winter,

      2 coastline develops as distance grows,

      3 then simplifies to shadow, under-exposed.

      4 Points of light—quayside, harbour wall,

      5 the edge of the city—

      6 sink as the surface of the night fills in.

      7 Beyond the boat, the only interruption

      8 is the choppy grey-white we leave behind us,

      9 gone almost before it is gone from sight.

      10 What cannot be pictured is the depth

      11 with which the water moves against itself,

      12 in such abstraction the eye can find

      13 no break, direction or point of focus.

      14 Clearer, and more possible than this,

      15 is the circular horizon.

      16 Sea and sky meet in suspension,

      17 gradual familiar textures of black:

      18 eel-skin, marble, smoke, oil—

      19 made separate and apparent by the light

      20 that pours from the sun on to the moon,

      21 the constant white on which these unfixable

      22 layers of darkness thicken and fade.

      23 We are close to land, filtering through

      24 shipping lanes and marker buoys

      25 towards port and its addition of colour.

      26 There is a slight realignment of the planets.

      27 Day breaks at no particular moment.

      © Copyright Lavinia Greenlaw, 1993, reproduced under licence from Faber and Faber Ltd

     

     

     



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