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    First of the Last Chances

    Page 2
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      is a trick of the light, an invention

      of the skin on the top of the lake.

      I am here for the shadow tree’s sake,

      for its unannounced coming and going

      (no one plants, no one chops). I would give

      anything for a shadow tree, knowing,

      as its branches get caught in the sieve

      of the surface of water and live

      for a glance of the moon, moments only,

      that the dark fabrication I saw

      was a miracle, not like the lonely

      unexceptional lump on the shore,

      such a stickler for natural law

      with its sap, its botanical listing

      and its representation at Kew,

      its pedantic disciples, insisting

      that one cannot be both false and true.

      We are shadow trees. That’s what we do.

      He is Now a Country Member

      He is now a country member.

      The subscription rate goes down.

      January to December,

      If you live or work in town

      You pay more. You come more often

      And the fee, therefore, is high.

      In a vain attempt to soften

      Last year’s blow, he now drops by.

      Not a word since last September.

      He left town. We both know why.

      He says, ‘I’m a country member.’

      ‘I remember,’ I reply.

      Silk Librarian

      We have a silk librarian,

      One who behaves and looks

      Just like a real librarian

      When lending people books.

      We lost our first librarian

      Then others of her ilk.

      We need a good librarian

      And so we’ve gone for silk.

      A silk librarian endures.

      The paid and unpaid bills

      Are neatly filed in metal drawers.

      Eye-drops, inhalers, pills –

      Gone. We no longer house the cures

      For the imagined ills

      Of real librarians with flaws

      That far outweigh their skills.

      Real flowers used to be displayed.

      They died and made a mess.

      Genuine salaries were paid.

      Silk wages cost us less,

      Though, over time, the colours fade

      From eyes and hair and dress.

      Every two years or so, upgrade

      To maximise success.

      Feel free to disapprove, protest

      At what you never knew

      Until just now, and never guessed

      And cannot prove untrue.

      A sin too many, once confessed,

      Becomes a sin too few.

      While you deny that silk is best

      We cut the silk for you.

      God’s Eleventh Rule

      I want to sit beside the pool all day,

      Swim now and then, read Peeping Tom, a novel

      By Howard Jacobson. You needn’t pay

      To hire a car to drive me to a hovel

      Full of charred native art. Please can I stay

      Behind? I will if necessary grovel.

      I want to sit beside the pool all day,

      Swim now and then, read Peeping Tom, a novel.

      Pardon? You’re worried I will find it boring?

      My days will be repetitive and flat?

      You think it would be oodles more alluring

      To see the chair where Mao Tse Tung once sat.

      Novels and pools are all I need for touring,

      My Peeping Tom, Nostromo after that.

      Pardon? You’re worried I will find it boring.

      My days will be repetitive and flat.

      Okay, so you were right about Nostromo,

      But I’ve a right to stay in this hotel.

      Sienna: I refused to see il duomo.

      (Does that mean Mussolini? Who can tell?)

      In Spain I told them, ‘Baño, bebo, como.’

      I shunned the site where Moorish warriors fell.

      Okay, so you were right about Nostromo

      But I’ve a right to stay in this hotel.

      I’m so alarmed, my voice becomes falsetto

      When you prescribe a trip round local slums.

      Would I drag you from Harvey Nicks to Netto?

      No I would not. Down, down go both my thumbs.

      I’m happy in this five-star rich man’s ghetto

      Where teeth are, by and large, attached to gums.

      I’m so alarmed, my voice becomes falsetto

      When you prescribe a trip round local slums.

      It’s not an English thing. No need to grapple

      With the strange ways we foreigners behave.

      My colleague would be thrilled to see your chapel,

      Turrets and frescos and your deepest cave,

      But as for me, I’d rather watch sun dapple

      The contours of a chlorinated wave.

      It’s not an English thing. No need to grapple

      With the strange ways we foreigners behave.

      I want to spend all day beside the pool.

      I wish that this were needless repetition,

      But next to you, a steroid-guzzling mule,

      A hunger strike and the first Christian mission

      Look apathetic. God’s eleventh rule:

      Thou shalt get sore feet at an exhibition.

      I want to spend all day beside the pool.

      I wish that this were needless repetition.

      Where to Look

      The leaves that this year brought

      next year won’t bring again.

      If autumn has one thought

      it is not where? but when?

      Summer is on the ground

      long before winter’s sting.

      The loss must be profound

      to make us hunt for spring.

      Eyes down, we find it dead,

      red powder at our feet

      but staring straight ahead

      we see its green wings beat,

      all future and no past,

      baffled as winter grieves.

      Next year, not this or last,

      is where to look for leaves.

      Brief Encounter

      I loved you and I left you at the station.

      I watched you on the platform and I waved,

      Taking in every scrap of information.

      Every last detail of your face, I saved,

      Thinking that when the engine started running

      And as the train proceeded down the track,

      You’d shrink, then disappear. But love is cunning:

      The station café faded into black,

      So did the world around you and beside you.

      You alone seemed to grow. In broken hearts

      Both distance and perspective are denied you.

      Love looks no smaller as the train departs.

      The Cycle

      I cannot stay – I’m not the one deserting –

      Or go; you are no longer here to leave.

      I can’t forgive, not without also hurting,

      Forget, or I’ll be even more naïve.

      I can’t confer; I’d feel that I was cheating.

      I can’t concede a case I’ve never fought

      Or win and not administer a beating.

      I cannot settle in or out of court,

      Can’t give in case I implicate the taker,

      Can’t take from everyone with ground to give

      And gather acre on untended acre

      When I need just a few square feet to live,

      Can’t end this in a neat or messy way.

      I cannot start again. I cannot stay.

      Black River

      I asked to return to my original love

      but I gave the wrong code and access was denied.

      The clocks go back, though by no means far enough.

      My white form came up green on the other side.

      It was so long sinc
    e I had tried

      that to do so was both a relief and a source of pride.

      I asked to return to my original niche.

      My house and furniture at Black River, I wrote,

      then read it through. It read like a limp pastiche.

      My white form came out smeared as a ransom note.

      I decided I must devote

      more time to the box marked Enter witty anecdote.

      I asked to return to my original ground.

      Original, scoffed the clerk, like there’s such a thing.

      I thought his procedures all the more unsound

      for being based on a rusty playground swing.

      Above us, a blackbird’s wing

      made a powerful case for never really bothering.

      I asked to return to my original point,

      but was that a person, a place or a state of mind?

      A man in the queue shouted out Let’s split this joint

      so I shared my stash and he left it all behind

      singing We, the undersigned,

      don’t know. Then I wandered off, and what should I find?

      Well, what I should find (though I cannot say that I did

      since the arrows were keen to point towards something new

      and all known rows, whether Savile, Death or Skid

      had become the past, the ephemera and the view)

      is that none of it is true.

      Go back to the starting line. Your original love is you.

      The Cancellation

      On the day of the cancellation

      The librarian phoned at two.

      My reading at Swillingcote Youth Club

      Had regrettably fallen through.

      The members of Swillingcote Youth Club

      Had just done their GCSEs

      And demanded a rave, not poems,

      Before they began their degrees.

      Since this happened at such short notice

      They would still have to pay my fee.

      I parked in the nearest lay-by

      And let out a loud yippee.

      The librarian put the phone down

      And muttered, ‘Oh, thank the Lord!’

      She was fed up of chaperoning

      While the touring poet toured.

      The girl from the local bookshop

      Who’d been told to provide a stall

      But who knew that the youth club members

      Would buy no books at all

      Expressed with a wild gyration

      Her joy at a late reprieve,

      And Andy, the youth club leader,

      And the youth arts worker, Steve,

      Both cheered as one does when granted

      The gift of eternal life.

      Each felt like God’s chosen person

      As he skipped back home to his wife.

      It occurred to me some time later

      That such bliss, such immense content,

      Needn’t always be left to fortune,

      Could in fact be a planned event.

      What ballet or play or reading,

      What movie creates a buzz

      Or boosts the morale of the nation

      As a cancellation does?

      No play, is the simple answer.

      No film that was ever shown.

      I submit that the cancellation

      Is an art form all of its own.

      To give back to a frantic public

      Some hours they were sure they’d lose

      Might well be my new vocation.

      I anticipate great reviews.

      From now on, with verve and gusto

      I’ll agree to a month-long tour.

      Call now if you’d like to book me

      For three hundred pounds or more.

      The Guest Speaker

      I have to keep myself awake

      While the guest speaker speaks.

      For his and for procedure’s sake

      I have to keep myself awake.

      However long his talk might take

      (And, Christ, it feels like weeks)

      I have to keep myself awake

      While the guest speaker speaks.

      Everyone in the Changing Room

      Everyone in the changing room pronounced it a disgrace.

      He’ll get short shrift in Baildon if he dares to show his face.

      He needs a damn good seeing to, that’s what all his lot need,

      Everyone in the changing room agreed.

      Everyone in the changing room reckons he’s lying low.

      The hot ones from the sauna want to tell him where to go.

      The cold ones from the plunge pool say someone should start a fund.

      Everyone in the changing room is stunned.

      Everyone in the changing room is certain it was him,

      Young mothers from aerobics and the runners from the gym

      And when they said it’s mental, this, and there’s no end in sight,

      Everyone in the changing room was right.

      Everyone in the changing room would fight for this good cause.

      We swim our lengths and lift our weights; you’ll want us in your wars.

      There will be no more tragedies, no waste or pain or loss

      When everyone in the changing room is boss.

      Your Funeral

      for L.W.

      Since our routine condolences are sent

      when someone dies, whether they’re young or old,

      even if while alive they were as cold

      as they are dead, if sympathy’s well meant,

      why should ungrieving relatives resent

      being unnecessarily condoled?

      Why should the blood associates get cross

      when bland acquaintances at wakes insist

      how much the coffin contents will be missed,

      how wonderful they were, what a great loss

      it is? Form here is all. We can’t just toss

      bodies away (although we can get pissed

      respectfully and in a mournful way).

      People are hypocrites. Why should we care?

      These days it’s not expected that we’ll wear

      a scrap of black. We’re not obliged to say

      a single word. We can just look away.

      Poor thing, the pain is more than she can bear

      some well-intentioned neighbour dressed in black

      will squawk, while we, in pinker shades of brown,

      watch the undear departed get on down,

      thinking of how we wouldn’t have her back,

      given a god-like choice, not for a stack

      of cash, not for a kingdom and a crown.

      Confident of the silence I’d maintain,

      I was prepared. Then suddenly you die

      and even silence seems too big a lie.

      My strange regrets chase decades down the drain.

      Can you still hear me now if I explain

      how much I’ve always hated you and why?

      Of course you can’t. There’s no such thing as you

      or hell, with all its demons and its fears.

      I should have told you in the living years,

      as Mike and the Mechanics said. How true.

      I didn’t, though, and so you never knew.

      Wreath after wreath arrives and it appears

      You got away with it. My mother went

      by plane to see you laid to rest abroad.

      I told her yet again what I am bored

      of telling her, that any money spent

      on duty, guilt and other forms of bent

      reasoning, one cannot, should not, afford.

      She went. She said I didn’t understand

      and maybe if all mothers were as good

      as mine, I would believe all daughters should

      behave that well, cross air or sea or land,

      even if they’re afraid of flying, stand

      beside their mothers in their crates of wood,

      but when respects can’t honestly be paid,

      only ensure the death i
    s genuine.

      Reserve an empty pocket for a pin

      (as did James Coburn in the film Charade).

      Dig out a shallow oblong with a spade.

      Insert deceased. See that deceased stays in.

      Away-day

      Dear baby the size of an olive,

      Advise me on how to proceed.

      On Thursday we’ve got an away-day

      Which will be very boring indeed.

      We’ll be trapped in a room with no windows,

      Doing things of no value at all

      And I shudder to think how much nonsense

      Will drift through the uterine wall.

      You might hear the name David Blunkett.

      Forget it as soon as you can

      And look forward to treats that are pending

      Like your first ever ultrasound scan.

      Dear baby the size of an olive

      I can’t take you away from all this

      But in seven months no one can touch us.

      Think of all the grim meetings we’ll miss:

      All those votes for more rules and less freedom.

      What a fine time I picked to conceive.

      Down with what is now called education

      And hurrah for maternity leave.

      Mother-to-be

      Eating a good balanced diet, taking plenty of exercise and fresh air and finding the time to relax when you’re away from work will improve your chances of conceiving a healthy baby… You should take particular care to cut down on ‘social drugs’. Cannabis is known to interfere with the normal production of sperm. It is also thought that LSD can cause birth defects.

     


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