Free Novel Read

Collected Poems Page 25


  About being a corpse. My cares float away

  Like non-biodegradable bottles.

  A cox crows. The crew slams on its oars

  And a rowing boat rises out of the water

  To teeter on splintering legs like a drunken tsetse fly.

  Before it can be disentangled

  And put into reverse, a miracle: Lazarus risen,

  Is up and away along the towpath.

  Near Hammersmith Bridge, the trainer

  Is on the other foot, as a hooded figure,

  Face in shadow, comes pounding towards me.

  A jogger? A mugger?

  A mugger whose hobby is jogging? Vice-versa?

  (Why do such men always have two g’s?)

  I search in vain for a bed of nettles.

  No need. She sprints past with a cherry ‘Hello’.

  I recognize the aromatherapist from Number 34.

  ***

  Waiting beneath the bridge for my breath

  To catch up, I hear a cry. A figure is leaning

  Out over the river, one hand on the rail.

  His screaming is sucked into the slipstream

  Of roaring traffic. On the walkway, pedestrians

  Hurry past like Bad Samaritans.

  I break into a sweat and run,

  Simultaneously. ‘Hold on,’ I cry, ‘hold on.’

  Galvanized, I’m up the stairs and at his side.

  The would-be suicide is a man in his late twenties,

  His thin frame shuddering with despair,

  His eyes, clenched tattoos: HATE, HATE.

  My opening gambit is the tried and trusted:

  ‘Don’t jump!’ He walks straight into the cliché-trap.

  ‘Leave me alone, I want to end it all.’

  I ask him why? ‘My wife has left me.’

  My tone is sympathetic. ‘That’s sad,

  But it’s not the end of the world.’

  ‘And I’m out of work and homeless.’

  ‘It could be worse,’ I say, and taking his arm

  Firmly but reassuringly, move in close.

  ‘If you think you’re hard done by

  You should hear what I’ve been through.

  Suffering? I’ll tell you about suffering.’

  We are joined by a man in a blue uniform.

  ‘I can handle this,’ I snarl.

  ‘You get back to your parking tickets.’

  He turns out to be a major

  In the Salvation Army, so I relent

  And let him share the intimacy of the moment.

  I explain the loneliness that is for ever

  The fate of the true artist,

  The icy coldness that grips the heart.

  The black holes of infinite despair

  Through which the sensitive spirit must pass.

  The seasons in Hell. The flowers of Evil.

  ***

  The tide was turning and a full moon rising

  As I lighted upon the existentialist nightmare,

  The chaos within that gives birth to the dancing star.

  I was illustrating the perpetual angst and ennui

  With a recent poem, when the would-be suicide

  jumped – (First)

  The Sally Army officer, four stanzas later.

  I had done my best. I dried my tears,

  Crossed the road and headed west.

  On the way home, needless to say, it rained.

  My hangover welcomed me with open arms.

  Nothing gained.

  Days

  What I admire most about days

  Is their immaculate sense of timing.

  They appear

  inevitably

  at first light

  Eke

  themselves out slowly

  over noon

  Then edge

  surefootedly

  toward evening

  To bow out

  at the very soupçon

  of darkness.

  Spot on cue, every time.

  In Good Hands

  Wherever night falls

  The earth is always

  There to catch it.

  Bees Cannot Fly

  Bees cannot fly, scientists have proved it.

  It is all to do with wingspan and body weight.

  Aerodynamically incapable of sustained flight,

  Bees simply cannot fly. And yet they do.

  There’s one there, unaware of its dodgy ratios,

  A noisy bubble, a helium-filled steamroller.

  Fat and proud of it, buzzing around the garden

  As if it were the last day of the spring sales.

  Trying on all the brightest flowers, squeezing itself

  Into frilly numbers three sizes too small.

  Bees can fly, there’s no need to prove it. And sting.

  When stung, do scientists refuse to believe it?

  My Life in the Garden

  It is a lovely morning, what with the sun, etc.

  And I won’t hear a word said against it.

  Standing in the garden I have no idea of the time

  Even though I am wearing the sundial hat you gave me.

  What the scene requires is an aural dimension

  And chuffed to high heaven, birds provide it.

  I think about my life in the garden

  About what has gone before

  And about what is yet to come.

  And were my feet not set in concrete,

  I would surely jump for joy.

  The Perfect Place

  The world is the perfect place to be born into.

  Unless of course, you don’t like people

  or trees, or stars, or baguettes.

  Its secret is movement.

  As soon as you have stepped back

  to admire the scenery

  or opened your mouth

  to sing its praises

  it has changed places with itself.

  Infinitesimally, perhaps,

  but those infinitesimals add up.

  (About the baguettes,

  that was just me being silly.)

  Happy Birthday

  One morning as you step out of the bath

  The telephone rings.

  Wrapped loosely in a towel you answer it.

  As you pick up the receiver

  The front doorbell rings.

  You ask the caller to hang on.

  Going quickly into the hall

  You open the door the merest fraction.

  On the doorstep is a pleasing stranger.

  ‘Would you mind waiting?’ You explain,

  ‘I’m on the telephone.’ Closing the door to,

  You hurry back to take the call.

  The person at the other end is singing:

  ‘Happy Birthday to you, Happy Birthday…’

  You hear the front door click shut.

  Footsteps in the hall.

  You turn…

  Here I Am

  Here I am

  getting on for seventy

  and never having gone to work in ladies’ underwear

  Never run naked at night in the rain

  Made love to a girl I’d just met on a plane

  At that awkward age now between birth and death

  I think of all the outrages unperpetrated

  opportunities missed

  The dragons unchased

  The maidens unkissed

  The wines still untasted

  The oceans uncrossed

  The fantasies wasted

  The mad urges lost

  Here I am

  as old as Methuselah

  was when he was my age

  and never having stepped outside for a fight

  Crossed on red, pissed on rosé (or white)

  Pretty dull for a poet, I suppose, eh? Quite.

  Uncle Roger

  I am distinctly

  ununclely.

  I forget birthdays

  and give Xmas presents


  only when cornered.

  (Money, of course, and too little.)

  I am regrettably

  ununclish.

  Too thin to be jolly,

  I can never remember

  jokes or riddles.

  Even fluff

  my own poems.

  My nephews and nieces

  as far as I know

  disuncled

  me some time ago.

  Better uncleless

  than my brand of petty

  uncleness.

  Punk doll

  Last week

  I bought my favourite niece

  A cute little doll

  From a punk toy shop

  In the King’s Road.

  When you twist the safety pin

  In her rosy cheek

  She vomits and shouts

  ‘shitshitshitshitshit’

  In a tinny voice.

  The doll is pretty strange too.

  Rocker-by

  Hush-a-bye, Daddy, don’t you cry

  Baby will sing a lullaby

  Your duck’s arse

  is thinning and grey

  Your Elvis tattoo

  is wearing away

  Your bootlace ties

  hang limp and frayed

  Your 78s

  are overplayed

  Not rock ’n’ roll

  but aches ’n’ pains

  Drainies play hell

  with varicose veins

  Your blue-suede shoes

  now have lead in them

  Drunk each night

  you go to bed in them

  When the music stops

  You’ll be dead in them

  Shush, old man, your day is done

  Where mine has only just begun

  Where It’s At

  I’m in the Health Club

  I’m where it’s at

  Twenty minutes on the mat

  Light circuit-training

  Gentle jog if not raining

  Sauna, jacuzzi

  Sit by Suzi

  I’m in the Wine Bar

  I’m where it’s at

  Vino tinto into that

  Pig out on tapas

  Choose momento, make a pass

  Scusi scusi

  Chat up Suzi

  I’m in the Porsche

  I’m where it’s at

  Rocks off in Docklands’ flat

  Ecstasy, share a smoke

  His ’n’ hers, two lines of coke

  CD something bluesy

  Hold tight Suzi

  I’m in prison

  I’m where it’s at

  Didn’t see the Passat. Splat!

  Banged up on Isle of Wight

  With terrorist and transvestite

  Can’t be choosy

  Bye bye Suzi.

  The Lottery

  At five o’clock our time a killer was fried

  According to law he was sentenced and died

  Georgia the state where they favour the chair

  When the switches were thrown I was washing my hair

  Just lucky I guess.

  At a quarter to midnight on his way to the shop

  A stolen car hit him, revved up didn’t stop

  On arrival at Casualty he was found to be dead

  When they rang up his wife I was reading in bed

  Just lucky I guess.

  At thirteen o nine it went out of control

  The port engine failed and it started to roll

  Imagine the scene on that ill-fated plane

  When it burst into flames I was dodging the rain

  Just lucky I guess.

  At twenty fifteen it was 9, 24,

  11 and 7, only needed three more

  As each number came up I hardly could speak

  Until I remembered… No ticket this week

  Unlucky I guess.

  Crazy Bastard

  I have always enjoyed the company of extroverts.

  Wild-eyed men who would go too far

  Up to the edge, and beyond. Mad, bad women.

  Overcautious, me. Sensible shoes and a scarf

  Tucked in. Fresh fruit and plenty of sleep.

  If the sign said, ‘Keep off’, then off is where I’d keep.

  ***

  Midsummer’s eve in the sixties.

  On a moonlit beach in Devon we sit around a fire

  Drinking wine and cider. Someone strumming a guitar.

  Suddenly, a girl strips off and runs into the sea.

  Everybody follows suit, a whoop of flickering nakedness

  Hot gold into cold silver.Far out.

  Not wanting to be last in I unbutton my jeans.

  Then pause. Someone had better stay behind

  And keep an eye on the clothes. Common sense.

  I throw another piece of driftwood on to the fire

  Above the crackle listen to the screams and the laughter

  Take a long untroubled swig of scrumpy. Crazy bastard.

  Fear of Flares

  I have this fear:

  At a glittering occasion,

  some kind of ceremony,

  I am waiting in line

  to be introduced to Princess Di

  when I realize that I am wearing

  flared trousers. Flared trousers!

  There is no time to lose.

  Unzipping them, I let them fall

  around my ankles, then stand back

  to attention. Her Royal Highness,

  to her credit, makes no mention,

  chats amiably, then moves on.

  I pull them up. No harm done.

  Q

  I join the queue

  We move up slowly.

  I ask the lady in front

  What are we queuing for.

  ‘To join another queue,’

  She explains.

  ‘How pointless,’ I say,

  ‘I’m leaving.’ She points

  To another long queue.

  ‘Then you must get in line.’

  I join the queue.

  We move up slowly.

  Clutching at Cheese Straws

  Out of my depth at the cocktail party

  I clutch at cheese straws.

  ‘Why are they called straws, do you think?’

  Treading water, the ice-cool blonde

  raises an eyebrow and shrugs.

  ‘I mean, you can’t drink through them.’

  A second eyebrow reaches for the sky.

  ‘Or is it because they taste like straw?’

  A pause, and then she says:

  ‘I assume it’s the shape, don’t you?’

  Holding my breath, I take the plunge

  and resurface with a crown of twiglets.

  ‘Why are these called…?’ But she has been rescued.

  Weighed down, I wade down to the shallow end

  and help the lads keep aloft

  A giant, inflatable hammer.

  Half-term

  Half-term holiday, family away

  Half-wanting to go, half-wanting to stay

  Stay in bed for half the day.

  Half-read, half-listen to the radio

  Half-think things through. Get up,

  Half-dressed, half-wonder what to do.

  Eat half a loaf, drink half a bottle

  (Save the other half until later).

  Other half rings up. Feel better.

  Isolation

  I like my isolation

  Within easy reach of other people’s

  Wide-open spaces set me on edge

  Than a bland savannah I’d rather be

  Something clumped beneath a hedge

  Perfume

  I lack amongst other things a keen sense of smell.

  Coffee I have no problem with. It leads me

  by the nose into the kitchen each morning

  before vanishing at first sip.

  And cheap scent? Ah, bonsoir!

  How many lamp-posts have Ir />
  almost walked into, senses blindfolded,

  lost in the misdemeanours of time?

  At twenty paces I can sniff the difference

  between a vindaloo and a coq au vin.

  Weak at the knees, I will answer

  the siren call of onions sizzling,

  Sent reeling, punch-drunk on garlic.

  No, it’s the subtleties that I miss.

  Flowers. Those free gifts laid out

  on Mother Nature’s perfume counter.

  Sad but true, roses smell red to me

  (even white ones). Violets blue.

  Everything in the garden, though lovely,

  might as well be cling-filmed.

  If I close my eyes and you hold up

  a bloom, freshly picked, moist with dew,

  I smell nothing. Your fingers perhaps?

  Oil of Ulay? Nail varnish?

  Then describe in loving detail its pinkness,

  the glowing intensity of its petals,

  and I will feel its warm breath upon me,

  the distinctive scent of its colour.

  Those flowers you left in the bedroom

  a tangle of rainbows spilling from the vase.

  Gorgeous. I turn off the light.