登陆注册
10794900000001

第1章

for Matthew and Caroline

At Toomebridge

Where the flat water

Came pouring over the weir out of Lough Neagh

As if it had reached an edge of the flat earth

And fallen shining to the continuous

Present of the Bann.

Where the checkpoint used to be.

Where the rebel boy was hanged in '98.

Where negative ions in the open air

Are poetry to me. As once before

The slime and silver of the fattened eel.

Perch

Perch on their water-perch hung in the clear Bann River

Near the clay bank in alder-dapple and waver,

Perch we called 'grunts', little flood-slubs, runty and ready,

I saw and I see in the river's glorified body

That is passable through, but they're bluntly holding the pass,

Under the water-roof, over the bottom, adoze,

Guzzling the current, against it, all muscle and slur

In the finland of perch, the fenland of alder, on air

That is water, on carpets of Bann stream, on hold

In the everything flows and steady go of the world.

Lupins

They stood. And stood for something. Just by standing.

In waiting. Unavailable. But there

For sure. Sure and unbending.

Rose-fingered dawn's and navy midnight's flower.

Seed packets to begin with, pink and azure,

Sifting lightness and small jittery promise:

Lupin spires, erotics of the future,

Lip-brush of the blue and earth's deep purchase.

O pastel turrets, pods and tapering stalks

That stood their ground for all our summer wending

And even when they blanched would never balk.

And none of this surpassed our understanding.

Out of the Bag

1

All of us came in Doctor Kerlin's bag.

He'd arrive with it, disappear to the room

And by the time he'd reappear to wash

Those nosy, rosy, big, soft hands of his

In the scullery basin, its lined insides

(The colour of a spaniel's inside lug)

Were empty for all to see, the trap-sprung mouth

Unsnibbed and gaping wide. Then like a hypnotist

Unwinding us, he'd wind the instruments

Back into their lining, tie the cloth

Like an apron round itself,

Darken the door and leave

With the bag in his hand, a plump ark by the keel …

Until the next time came and in he'd come

In his fur-lined collar that was also spaniel-coloured

And go stooping up to the room again, a whiff

Of disinfectant, a Dutch interior gleam

Of waistcoat satin and highlights on the forceps.

Getting the water ready, that was next –

Not plumping hot, and not lukewarm, but soft,

Sud-luscious, saved for him from the rain-butt

And savoured by him afterwards, all thanks

Denied as he towelled hard and fast,

Then held his arms out suddenly behind him

To be squired and silk-lined into the camel coat.

At which point he once turned his eyes upon me,

Hyperborean, beyond-the-north-wind blue,

Two peepholes to the locked room I saw into

Every time his name was mentioned, skimmed

Milk and ice, swabbed porcelain, the white

And chill of tiles, steel hooks, chrome surgery tools

And blood dreeps in the sawdust where it thickened

At the foot of each cold wall. And overhead

The little, pendent, teat-hued infant parts

Strung neatly from a line up near the ceiling –

A toe, a foot and shin, an arm, a cock

A bit like the rosebud in his buttonhole.

2

Poeta doctus Peter Levi says

Sanctuaries of Asclepius (called asclepions)

Were the equivalent of hospitals

In ancient Greece. Or of shrines like Lourdes,

Says poeta doctus Graves. Or of the cure

By poetry that cannot be coerced,

Say I, who realized at Epidaurus

That the whole place was a sanatorium

With theatre and gymnasium and baths,

A site of incubation, where 'incubation'

Was technical and ritual, meaning sleep

When epiphany occurred and you met the god …

Hatless, groggy, shadowing myself

As the thurifer I was in an open-air procession

In Lourdes in '56

When I nearly fainted from the heat and fumes,

Again I nearly fainted as I bent

To pull a bunch of grass and hallucinated

Doctor Kerlin at the steamed-up glass

Of the scullery window, starting in to draw

With his large pink index finger dot-faced men

With button-spots in a straight line down their fronts

And women with dot breasts, giving them all

A set of droopy sausage-arms and legs

That soon began to run. And then as he dipped and laved

In the generous suds again, miraculum:

The baby bits all came together swimming

Into his soapy big hygienic hands

And I myself came to, blinded with sweat,

Blinking and shaky in the windless light.

3

Bits of the grass I pulled I posted off

To one going in to chemotherapy

And one who had come through. I didn't want

To leave the place or link up with the others.

It was midday, mid-May, pre-tourist sunlight

In the precincts of the god,

The very site of the temple of Asclepius.

I wanted nothing more than to lie down

Under hogweed, under seeded grass

And to be visited in the very eye of the day

By Hygeia, his daughter, her name still clarifying

The haven of light she was, the undarkening door.

4

The room I came from and the rest of us all came from

Stays pure reality where I stand alone,

Standing the passage of time, and she's asleep

In sheets put on for the doctor, wedding presents

That showed up again and again, bridal

And usual and useful at births and deaths.

Me at the bedside, incubating for real,

Peering, appearing to her as she closes

And opens her eyes, then lapses back

Into a faraway smile whose precinct of vision

I would enter every time, to assist and be asked

In that hoarsened whisper of triumph,

'And what do you think

Of the new wee baby the doctor brought for us all

When I was asleep?'

Bann Valley Eclogue

Sicelides Musae, paulo maiora canamus. Virgil, Eclogue IV

POET

Bann Valley Muses, give us a song worth singing,

Something that rises like the curtain in

Those words And it came to pass or In the beginning.

Help me to please my hedge-schoolmaster Virgil

And the child that's due. Maybe, heavens, sing

Better times for her and her generation.

VIRGIL

Here are my words you'll have to find a place for:

Carmen? ordo, nascitur? saeculum, gens.

Their gist in your tongue and province should be clear

Even at this stage. Poetry, order, the times,

The nation, wrong and renewal, then an infant birth

And a flooding away of all the old miasma.

Whatever stains you, you rubbed it into yourselves,

Earth mark, birth mark, mould like the bloodied mould

On Romulus's ditch-back. But when the waters break

Bann's stream will overflow, the old markings

Will avail no more to keep east bank from west.

The valley will be washed like the new baby.

POET

Pacatum orbem: your words are too much nearly.

Even 'orb' by itself. What on earth could match it?

And then, last month, at noon-eclipse, wind dropped.

A millennial chill, birdless and dark, prepared.

A firstness steadied, a lastness, a born awareness

As name dawned into knowledge: I saw the orb.

VIRGIL

Eclipses won't be for this child. The cool she'll know

Will be the pram hood over her vestal head.

Big dog daisies will get fanked up in the spokes.

She'll lie on summer evenings listening to

A chug and slug going on in the milking parlour.

Let her never hear close gunfire or explosions.

POET

Why do I remember St Patrick's mornings,

Being sent by my mother to the railway line

For the little trefoil, untouchable almost, the shamrock

With its twining, binding, creepery, tough, thin roots

All over the place, in the stones between the sleepers.

Dew-scales shook off the leaves. Tear-ducts asperging.

Child on the way, it won't be long until

You land among us. Your mother's showing signs,

Out for her sunset walk among big round bales.

Planet earth like a teething ring suspended

Hangs by its world-chain. Your pram waits in the corner.

Cows are let out. They're sluicing the milk-house floor.

Montana

The stable door was open, the upper half,

When I looked back. I was five years old

And Dologhan stood watching me go off,

John Dologhan, the best milker ever

To come about the place. He sang

'The Rose of Mooncoin' with his head to the cow's side.

He would spin his table knife and when the blade

Stopped with its point towards me, a bright path

Opened between us like a recognition

That made no sense, like my memory of him standing

Behind the half door, holding up the winkers.

Even then he was like an apparition,

A rambler from the Free State and a gambler,

All eyes as the pennies rose and slowed

On Sunday mornings under Butler's Bridge

And downed themselves into that tight-bunched crowd

Of the pitch-and-toss school. Sunlight on far lines,

On the creosoted sleepers and hot stones.

And Dologhan, who'd worked in Montana once,

With the whole day off, in the cool shade of the arch.

The Loose Box

Back at the dark end, slats angled tautly down

From a breast-high beam to the foot of the stable wall –

Silked and seasoned timber of the hayrack.

Marsupial brackets … And a deep-littered silence

Off odourless, untainting, fibrous horsedung.

*

On an old recording Patrick Kavanagh states

That there's health and worth in any talk about

The properties of land. Sandy, glarry,

Mossy, heavy, cold, the actual soil

Almost doesn't matter; the main thing is

An inner restitution, a purchase come by

By pacing it in words that make you feel

You've found your feet in what 'surefooted' means

And in the ground of your own understanding –

Like Heracles stepping in and standing under

Atlas's sky-lintel, as earthed and heady

As I am when I talk about the loose box.

*

And they found the infant wrapped in swaddling clothes

And laid in a manger.

But the plaster child in nappies,

Bare baby-breasted little rigor vitae?

Crook-armed, seed-nailed, nothing but gloss and chill –

He wasn't right at all.

And no hayrack

To be seen.

The solid stooping shepherds,

The stiff-lugged donkey, Joseph, Mary, each

Figure in the winter crib was well

And truly placed. There was even real straw

On the side-altar. And an out-of-scale,

Too crockery, kneeling cow. And fairy lights.

But no, no fodder-billowed armfuls spilling over …

At the altar rail I knelt and learnt almost

Not to admit the let-down to myself.

*

Stable child, grown stabler when I read

In adolescence Thomas dolens Hardy –

Not, oddly enough, his Christmas Eve night-piece

About the oxen in their bedded stall,

But the threshing scene in Tess of the D'Urbevilles –

That magnified my soul. Raving machinery,

The thresher bucking sky, rut-shuddery,

A headless Trojan horse expelling straw

From where the head should be, the underjaws

Like staircases set champing – it hummed and slugged

While the big sag and slew of the canvas belt

That would cut your head off if you didn't watch

Flowed from the flywheel. And comes flowing back,

The whole mote-sweaty havoc and mania

Of threshing day, the feeders up on top

Like pyre-high Aztec priests gutting forked sheaves

And paying them ungirded to the drum.

Slack of gulped straw, the belly-taut of seedbags.

And in the stilly night, chaff piled in ridges,

Earth raw where the four wheels rocked and battled.

*

Michael Collins, ambushed at Beal na Blath,

At the Pass of Flowers, the Blossom Gap, his own

Bloom-drifted, soft Avernus-mouth,

Has nothing to hold on to and falls again

Willingly, lastly, foreknowledgeably deep

Into the hay-floor that gave once in his childhood

Down through the bedded mouth of the loft trapdoor,

The loosening fodder-chute, the aftermath …

This has been told of Collins and retold

By his biographer:

One of his boy-deeds

Was to enter the hidden jaws of that hay crevasse

And get to his feet again and come unscathed

Through a dazzle of pollen scarves to breathe the air.

True or not true, the fall within his fall,

That drop through the flower-floor lets him find his feet

In an underworld of understanding

Better than any newsreel lying-in-state

Or footage of the laden gun-carriage

And grim cortège could ever manage to.

Or so it can be stated

In the must and drift of talk about the loose box.

Turpin Song

The horse pistol, we called it:

Brass inlay smooth in the stock,

Two hammers cocked like lugs,

Two mottled metal barrels,

Sooty nostrilled, levelled.

Bracketed over the door

Of the lower bedroom, a ghost

Heft that we longed to feel,

Two fingers on two triggers,

The full of your hand of haft.

Where was the Great North Road?

Who rode in a tricorn hat?

Bob Cushley with his jennet?

Ned Kane in his pony and trap?

The thing was out of place.

When I lift up my eyes at the start

Of Stanley Kubrick's film

A horse pistol comes tumbling

From over the door of the world

And it's nineteen forty-eight

Or nine, we have transgressed,

We've got our hands on it

And it lies there, broken in bits.

Wind blows through the open hayshed.

I lift up my eyes with the apes.

The Border Campaign

for Nadine Gordimer

Soot-streaks down the courthouse wall, a hole

Smashed in the roof, the rafters in the rain

Still smouldering:

when I heard the word 'attack'

In St Columb's College in nineteen fifty-six

It left me winded, left nothing between me

And the sky that moved beyond my boarder's dormer

The way it would have moved the morning after

Savagery in Heorot, its reflection placid

In those waterlogged huge pawmarks Grendel left

On the boreen to the marsh.

All that was written

And to come I was a part of then,

At one with clan chiefs galloping down paths

To gaze at the talon Beowulf had nailed

High on the gable, the sky still moving grandly.

Every nail and claw-spike, every spur

And hackle and hand-barb on that heathen brute

Was like a steel prong in the morning dew.

Known World

'Nema problema!' The Macedonian

Taxi-driver screeched and the taxi screeched

At every unfenced corner on the pass,

Then accelerated.

'Beria! Beria! Beria!'

Screeched Vladimir Chupeski, every time

He smashed a vodka glass and filled another

During those days and nights of '78

When we hardly ever sobered at the Struga

Poetry Festival.

Rafael Alberti

Was 'honouree' and Caj Westerburg,

A Finnish Hamlet in black corduroy,

Sweated 'on principle' (or was that my projection

Of a northern tweed-wearer's contrariness?).

Also there: 'Hans Magnus Enzensberger.

Unexpected. Sharp in panama hat,

Pressed-to-a-T cream linen suit. He gets

Away with it.'

And a soothsaying Dane

Of the avant-garde, squinting up at a squinch,

His eye as clear as the water and coral floor

Of Lake Ohrid. His first words to me were:

'Is this not you, these mosaics and madonnas?

You are a south. Your bogs were summer bogs.'

*

In Belgrade I had found my west-in-east.

'Belmullet melancholy of huckster shops

And small shop windows. Unfresh bread, tinned peas.

Also Belmullet elders in the streets.

Black shawls, straight walk, the weather eye, the beads.'

Then I saw men in fezes, left the known world

On the short and sweetening mud-slide of a coffee.

*

At the still centre of the cardinal points

The flypaper hung from our kitchen ceiling,

Honey-strip and death-trap, a barley-sugar twist

Of glut and loathing …

In a nineteen-fifties

Of iron stoves and kin groups still in place,

Congregations blackening the length

And breadth of summer roads.

And now the refugees

Come loaded on tractor mudguards and farm carts,

On trailers, ruck-shifters, box-barrows, prams,

On sticks, on crutches, on each other's shoulders,

I see its coil again like a syrup of Styx,

An old gold world-chain the world keeps falling from

Into the cloud-boil of a camera lens.

Were we not made for summer, shade and coolness

And gazing through an open door at sunlight?

For paradise lost? Is that what I was taught?

*

That old sense of a tragedy going on

Uncomprehended, at the very edge

Of the usual, it never left me once …

A pity I didn't know then (for Caj's sake)

Hygo Simberg's allegory of Finland,

The one where the wounded angel's being carried

By two farm youngsters across an open field:

Marshland, estuary light, a farther shore

With factory chimneys. Is it the socialist thirties

Or the shale and slag and sloblands of great hurt?

A first communion angel with big white wings,

White bandage round her brow, white flowers in hand,

Holds herself in place on a makeshift stretcher

Between manchild number one in round soft hat

And manchild number two in a bumfreezer

And what could be his father's Wellingtons.

Allegory, I say, but who's to know

How to read sorrow rightly, or at all?

*

The open door, the jambs, the worn saddle

And actual granite of the doorstep slab.

Now enter another angel, fit as ever,

Past each house with a doorstep daubed 'Serb house'.

*

How does the real get into the made-up?

Ask me an easier one.

But this much I do know:

Our taxi-man, for all his speed, was late

For the poetry reading we were meant to give

At a cement factory in the mountains.

So a liquid lunch with comrade managers

Ended in siesta and woozy wake-ups

Just before sunset. Then, the notebook says,

'People on the move, field full of folk,

Packhorses with panniers, uphill push

Of families, unending pilgrim stream.

Today is workers' day in memory

Of General Strike. Also Greek Orthodox

Madonna's Day.'

We followed a dry watercourse,

Rattling stones, subdued by the murmuring crowd

As darkness fell. We passed a water-blesser

On his rock apart, El Greco-gaunt and cinctured

('Magician,' said Vladimir), waving his cross

Above the tins and jampotfuls held up.

同类推荐
  • Fish (Sheila Lukins Short eCookbooks)

    Fish (Sheila Lukins Short eCookbooks)

    For over twenty years, PARADE food editor, writer, and chef Sheila Lukins has inspired would-be chefs across the country with her accessible and easy-to-prepare Simply Delicious recipes. This e-cookbook is a compilation of Sheila's favorite chicken recipes from her time at PARADE, written with the busy home cook in mind.In addition to dozens of creative and succulent chicken recipes, this book provides an easy tutorial on how to roast the perfect chicken and carve poultry at the table. Readers get plenty of delicious and fun ideas for jazzing up a weeknight chicken dinner or creating the perfect special-occasion meal—that are sure to delight the entire family.
  • Chicken (Sheila Lukins Short eCookbooks)

    Chicken (Sheila Lukins Short eCookbooks)

    For over twenty years, PARADE food editor, writer, and chef Sheila Lukins has inspired would-be chefs across the country with her accessible and easy-to-prepare Simply Delicious recipes. This e-cookbook is a compilation of Sheila's favorite chicken recipes from her time at PARADE, written with the busy home cook in mind.In addition to dozens of creative and succulent chicken recipes, this book provides an easy tutorial on how to roast the perfect chicken and carve poultry at the table. Readers get plenty of delicious and fun ideas for jazzing up a weeknight chicken dinner or creating the perfect special-occasion meal—that are sure to delight the entire family.
  • The Children's Hospital
  • The Life, Adventures & Piracies of the Famous

    The Life, Adventures & Piracies of the Famous

    The Life, Adventures and Piracies of the Famous Captain Singleton is a novel by Daniel Defoe, originally published in 1720. It has been republished multiple times since, some of which times were in 1840, in 1927, in 1972 and in 2008. Captain Singleton is believed to have been partly inspired by the exploits of the English pirate Henry Every, who operated in the late 17th century. The narrative describes the life of the Englishman, Singleton, stolen from a well-to-do family as a child and raised by Gypsies, eventually making his way to sea. The former half of the book concerns Singleton's crossing of Africa, the latter half concerning his life as a pirate in the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea.
  • Untamed (Splintered Series Companion)
热门推荐
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 故事会(2015年3月上)

    故事会(2015年3月上)

    朋友告诉我,她最近新认识一个男人,双方趣味相投,有点想继续发展的意思。但问题是,男人双鱼座,她是白羊座,别人都说这俩星座不搭,问我怎么办。我想了想,给朋友讲了个故事:有个女孩,她曾经读过一篇关于睡姿的文章,说专家经调查分析,得出以下结论—向左睡的人自私,向右睡的人大度,仰面睡的人稳重,趴着睡的人粗心。女孩上了大学,一个宿舍四个人,搬进去第一天,大家都熟睡了,女孩忽然想起那篇文章,就好奇地悄悄起身观察,发现三人中只有阿宝是朝左睡的。那天之后,女孩总忘不了“向左睡的人自私”,开始和阿宝保持距离。
  • 萌妻来袭:老公,抱一抱

    萌妻来袭:老公,抱一抱

    他是全国最强势的总裁,宠她入骨,唯一让他抓狂的就是,小妻子总是想要逃跑!她设计怀了他的宝宝,最后携子潜逃。他几乎翻遍整个A市,都没有找到她。谁知,五年后,她携子归来,却对他爱理不理,身边的桃花竟开到家门口。而她却不怕死的,一逃再逃,偷了他的心,竟然还要跟着别人跑?
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 我真的是大法师

    我真的是大法师

    突然变成了法师怎么办?当然是上网搜索一下法师加点攻略啊……“法师怎么加点?”【一级光亮术照明,双持点满,其它全点体质和力量。】周佳看着搜索引擎搜出来的答案,作为游戏小白的他,竟然信了!
  • 你就藏在我满目柔光里

    你就藏在我满目柔光里

    暗恋陈木深十四年,许意那可是坚持不懈勇往直前,不管陈木深对她多冷淡,她都不在意,她只知道,喜欢陈木深,一定是值得的。暗恋许意十六年,陈木深总是在她身后保护她,她只知道,不管许意喜不喜欢他,他这一辈子,就认定是这个女孩了。听说双重人格喜欢同一个人的概率很小,但是陈木深跟陈小深,却心有灵犀,都偏爱许意,三年前那场意外,陈小深彻底消失,许意却在考虑,她到底喜欢的是谁……双向暗恋X男主双重人格X暖心治愈校园篇快来入坑吧~~
  • 甜妻娇宠:娘子我不想玩了

    甜妻娇宠:娘子我不想玩了

    “采采,不要了,不行了,为夫的腰来不了了。”封韶捂着腰连连后退,想要躲开他家娘子。“哼这就不行了,这才多久呢,”唐采采不满地扑住夫君大人,“不行,再做一次。”封韶无奈地被他的宝贝娘子再次拉上蹦极台,心里是在哭的。......听说敦肃公主家的小王爷娶了个好娘子,小夫妻两个比着玩闹。今日他请了一众公子去曲江听戏打马郊游,明日她就带了几位相好的小娘子在家里搭台看曲还亲自赏了那小生一对镯子!今日他组织一场赏花游园会,明日她就带着京城贵族去玩什么蹦极刺激!一瞬间京城热闹得不得了,岂不知两人缘分早已天注定,唐采采明眸善睐,“相公!过来玩!”1v1甜宠不解释,看女主在古代玩出一个娱乐帝国!
  • 遇见你每一秒我都在心痛

    遇见你每一秒我都在心痛

    遇见谁、喜欢谁,是命中注定的吗?受过伤的心,又是否会被治愈,那个被紧紧包覆的心;又是否会打开自己的心扉,失去自我的包容和放纵,又是否会有结局……
  • 凰医帝临七神

    凰医帝临七神

    (原名《焚尽七神:狂傲女帝》)前世,她贵为巅峰女帝,一夕之间局势逆转,沦为废材之质。魂灵双修,医毒无双,血脉觉醒,一御万兽。天现异象,凰命之女,自此归来,天下乱之。这一次,所有欺她辱她之人必杀之!他自上界而来,怀有目的,却因她动摇内心深处坚定的道义。“你曾说,你向仰我,你想像我一样,步入光明,是我对不起你,又让你重新回到黑暗。”“你都不在了,你让我一个人,怎么像向仰你?!”爱与不爱,从来都是我们自己的事,与他人无关。带走了所有的光明与信仰。
  • 凤仪归来:毒医绝色

    凤仪归来:毒医绝色

    彼时,她唤名黎芙儿。是三百里奉陵容不下的豪族黎家貌美嫡长女是被他捧在手心里集万千宠爱于一身的宠妃,是天下无数女子皆艳羡之人!变故横生,一夜间她跌入万丈深渊,粉身碎骨!家世败落、奸人残害、众叛亲离!她抱着孩子跪地央求,他冷漠如冰、视若无睹。幼子惨死,她被推下万丈深渊。那一刻终醒悟,原来一切皆是他设的局,而她,只是一枚棋子罢了。此时,她换名郁堇离。离人如歌、堇色苍凉、此生终郁郁无欢。待凤仪归来时,她还是她却再也不是她。凤凰盘捏、浴火重生、报仇雪恨、手刃仇人,这是她唯一的目的!至于爱情?她笑了…