Wednesday 30 April 2014

In Which The Poet Attempts To Say Goodbye To Poetry


When we part ways
the world will be
straightforward once again. 
A cup will be a cup. 
A shoe will be a shoe
not a soup ladle 
not a megaphone
not a submarine.
Mornings will not awaken 
as if they were creatures 
stirring after long sleep. 

Yesterday’s eye exam
should have been routine
but I saw the optician’s legs curl
round each other like snakes. 
I saw the back of my own retina 
as the cracked surface of a clay planet. 
This will not do. 
My eyeball is not a planet
for if it were then I would be
my own solar system
perhaps even a galaxy.
Just thinking about it
makes me dizzy.
When I am in your company
the whole world can shift in a moment. 
There is no solid ground.

When you and I part ways
the women will wear quite ordinary hats. 
Their heads will not sprout flowers, 
will not become bird nests. 
Trees will not grow arms or claws. 
I will be able to go 
for an ordinary stroll 
on an ordinary day 
in the ordinary woods. 
The green will just be green,
not a leprechaun’s shirt or dragon’s eye.

You were wonderful. 
You sang me songs 
when the train chugged out of the station. 
The tunnel was the night, 
was a route to the underworld, 
was the inside of my own mind. 
Now everything will go back to normal. 
I won’t cry. 
Only poems make me cry. 
They produce tears like jewels 
tumbling out of a treasure chest.

I am trying to say goodbye
but I can’t do it.
You see,
I think
I may 
have
fallen
in love,
with 
you.



Last Night My Heart





Monday 28 April 2014

Double Date


When you avert my gaze
it seems as though you are shy,
as though I’m some beautiful girl
who wouldn’t want to know you.
Perhaps you are
star gazing,
divining futures from the clouds,
the tops of trees,
cranes, kites.
We drink our coffee
and still
you do not look me in the eye. 
Instead you gaze at the space around my head
as if I exist there beside myself,
another me 
to whom you can address your comments, 
another me 
who will hear you better,
will answer you in some enigmatic way.
I grow jealous of her,
knowing that to look into
the dark of her eye
is to be stripped bare
and once seen like that
you can never be clothed again
no matter how many brightly coloured shirts you try. 



Sunday 27 April 2014

The Spin


I live in the mountains
but you’re not gonna
find me there.
I'm coming to the city
to seek you out.
I move like silk
smooth and cool
towards the district
the golden bucks
the business
where I’m gonna
pop some corks
and release 
my motorcycle roar.
What do I do all day?
I am planning your life.
I distract you with the high 
slit of my skirt
my perfect thigh.
Don’t try to chase me.
I am a red wheel.
I am spinning like a snake.
and I 
am following 
you.


Bread


Each time
I am amazed.
Flour, water, yeast.
Some salt.
Simple.
But then
our muscles mix 
the flour froths
and the bright bread 
starts to bubble.
Our aprons ache 
for more warm water. 
More!
Don’t be afraid!
The room lights
and rises
and the dough turns
in our high hot hands
to something 
as real 
as you or I,
miraculous
and alive.



Saturday 26 April 2014

The Last Storytellers of Cremone


I see them emerge 
from St John’s Wood underground:
the women of the bare feet,
the women of the crooked back,
the women of the shuffling step,
turbans huge as baskets
wrapped around their heads,
necks bent to the left as if listening
to the dreams of scuttling trains.

I follow them to their little room
just off Grove End Road.
They promise to tell one story
for each round of fabric 
that is unwound from their heads.
And as they talk, all that they have carried
falls onto the floor:
painted tea-pots, silver thimbles and spoons,
wedding dresses, candlesticks,
waistcoats and blankets sewn by hand.

We sit on the floor and laugh.
They strip the night from my eye.
They tell the story of the king of the wind.
They voice the jewels of my own wonder.
I ask them where their land lies.
I ask them why their heads are weighted down.
I ask them what they yearn for.

One story for each round.
But every piece of fabric they remove
must wind around my own head
as each tale I hear becomes my own.
I hear of the lost land of Cremone
and wonder how a country can be lost.

Each woman tells a different tale:
the trees grew too tall and toppled down, 
the borders stretched too thin and disappeared,
the people turned too proud and moved away.
I hear of a land that faded out of time.
I hear of a land now carried in the stories,
in the turbans, on the heads of these women.

One story for each round.
And when the night is through
I feel my own head
newly turbanned
filled with stories.
We are the women of the milky eye.
We are the women of the laughing teeth.
We are the women of the vanished land.
We are the last storytellers of Cremone.



Reality






Friday 25 April 2014

These Old Cafés


Not the smart redecorated ones 
with mobile phone top-ups 
and take-home mugs. 
The archaic ones 
with walls that flake and puff 
where strange folk sit and pick 
their nails with toothpicks, coins,
the corners of matchbooks. 

A book of matches. A book of fire. 
A book of all the things that burn 
before your eyes 
and in that end regain their dignity 
like a viking warlord aflame in his boat 
pushed out to sea
lighting the night with his memory 
held in the minds of men 
who will drink long horns of ale to him 
and sing the ancient songs. 

In these cafés there are such things;
books of matches
books of the stories that cannot exist 
anywhere else in this world. 
Men who are not yet old 
prop themselves on the crumbling chair. 
A newspaper rests on the table 
but these men don’t read; 
they are busy with something else, 
some invisible work that eats up all their time. 

You wanted a take-away coffee 
but you have come to the wrong place. 
You have entered with too much speed. 
Your voice sounds too loud 
and disturbs the thick air. 
You realise it only once the words 
have left your mouth. 
This place doesn’t do take-away. 
It may take a while for any drink to come at all. 

Wednesday 23 April 2014

A Vanishing Act






Susanna's Bath


After Nuno Júdice


I enter the water, which smokes
with steam. Then I fetch The Luz
which surpasses in value all our gold.
My sombreness evaporates, so
fickle immobile, sobbing on cue.
Under the stars of São Oleos
the reflexes of my skin dissolve.

My spirit lifts in accordance
with The Luz, like a quietness that
is whispered. And when The Whole
is explained, described in blazing detail
on my body, around each curve,
I dance inside like a wild snake.
And today the stars are brilliant
like our ancestors of the world.

Enter. Fetch the water. I invite you.
Enter the bath, and we will do well
in the salt of the three courts, the
teeth of the caravans, those boxes that revolve. 
We will hear the chimes of the two sisters,
quiet as The Luz is quiet, 
whose cost is above all else.
Then freshen your skin with the sponge
for the hours have traversed us.



The NaPoWriMo prompt for today is to choose a poem in a language you don’t understand and then translate it into English based on the look of the words and their sounds. I have attempted a translation of O Banho de Susana by Nuno Júdice of Portugal. I did not look at the proper translation until I was finished. But when I did, I was rewarded; Júdice's poem is beautiful and worth reading.

Tuesday 22 April 2014

The Furnace Man


The Furnace Man 
barbecues 
people for dinner
picks them up like logs 
stokes his mouth full
doesn’t have to chew 
the flames in his belly 
flicker hot and fast
vaporize the bones
until nothing remains 
no skin no eyes 
no diamond necklaces 
not even dreams. 

But one day 
the memories of the girl 
he has just consumed 
evade the heat
flip-flop in his mind
salty and fresh.
He separates them out 
from everything that burns 
and keeps them 
in the cool of his head
just behind his left eye. 

She swims along the beach 
she and her brother 
they bob up and down 
in the waves 
sink into the depths
imagine they are mermaids
shipwrecks seaweed
then the sky lifts them 
into the blue
so much happiness it brings 
this rise and fall rise and fall.

The Furnace Man 
loves the girl’s memories 
of the sea 
will not burn them
plays them over and over
until he loves her too  
and wishes she could 
be there with him. 
But that can never be 
for he has gobbled her body 
until there is none of it left 
no flesh
no eyeballs
no eardrums 
no pink fingernails 
none of it.

All he can do 
is drown 
and the salt 
cleanses the air 
the water bathes 
the red cheeks 
and the laughter rises 
from the water
like a song.


Lune


The football moon
someone kicked up a tree
never came down.


Monday 21 April 2014

My Waitrose Bill


It was Friday the 14th of March and I had just come back 
from the dentist on Carnaby Street. My face was still half 
numb but I wanted to eat something, maybe something 
that didn’t need much chewing like a smoothie.
I popped into Waitrose, the big one on Finchley Road, 
it’s the best one. They have everything there. 
I saw Bill Nighy. I was so siked! I acted all normal. But then
he dropped his loaf of bread. I ran after him and picked it up. 
Hallo! Hallo! I said. You’ve dropped your loaf! He was so cool.
He was wearing a stylish dark blue coat like in a film. 
But his basket was too full. He needed a trolley, didn’t he. 
But I had interfered enough. I could have said I love you I love 
your films but I was all anonymous and didn’t suggest 
anything. Should I have got him a trolley? They shouldn’t 
let people walk around like that all laden with stuff. 
I should have looked more carefully at what was in his basket. 
What does Bill Nighy eat? Was he having a party? 
He probably knows people like Jude Law and 
Michael Caine. Would he ever invite me to his party? 
He doesn’t know me. Maybe I should have talked to him 
some more. But I was all anonymous and I rushed off. 
Later when I was at the till I kept looking out for Bill. 
And as I stood there I realised he probably wouldn’t want 
that loaf, not after I had touched it with my fingers 
and hands, and certainly not after it had been on the floor 
which is touched all the time by the underneaths of peoples 
shoes which have also been outside. But maybe he didn’t mind. 
Do you think he would have minded? I wish I would have 
talked to him some more. I looked him up on FaceBook 
when I got home. I wanted to friend him to thank him to say 
Hallo! Hallo! I was the girl in Waitrose who picked up your loaf. 
It was nothing. Don’t mention it. But listen, do you want to come 
to a party? But I couldn’t find him. There were all these Bill Nighy’s 
and none of them were the real one. None of them were my Waitrose Bill.



Sunday 20 April 2014

A Penal Colony For Poets


I committed a crime when I was young:
I threw my poems away.
The poetic police caught up with me,
they said I’d have to pay.

When I asked them how they found me,
they said I had a haunted look
from the ghosts of words discarded,
enough to fill a phantom book.

The colony was on the moon,
the mode of transport: ladder.
I had to build it myself with words;
this only made me sadder.

I had thrown my words away, you see,
so I had to go door to door
asking if anyone had spare words.
My cheeks burned ’til they were sore.

Eventually I had the words
like toaster scuttle marmalade.
They weren’t my own but they would do;
I had none that were homemade.

The ladder hooked the crescent moon,
I climbed in my bare feet.
Hands snatched at me, knives cut my skin,
how I wished I could retreat.

When I got there all I had were years
mining words from the white dust,
words from my lost writings,
words I did not trust.

The first I saw was corridor
then travel dream and trees
always time skies flown and child.
They brought me to my knees.

Happy I was to see them again,
I would reclaim my poems at last.
But they had dissolved into each other,
stray phrases floated past.

Let travel you me with always
I couldn’t piece them together
of the through the labyrinth night
my sorrow had no measure.

But whatever I found was mine to keep
so I made a little garden.
With autumn sunlight meadow and rose
my heart could now unharden.

When my time was up they found me,
said I was free to move to Mars,
but I told them I would stay here
in my hut made out of stars.


Saturday 19 April 2014

The Staircase


The staircase 
appears
one day
bursts 
through
the middle
of Mrs Weinstein’s
pampas grass.
First one step 
sprouts 
then two.
It grows
towards
the sky.
By the end 
of the week
it has reached 
the sun.
No one knows 
what 
to do.
Then Benny 
her eldest 
starts 
selling tickets.
He has 
a fortune
to accrue.

What’s up there 
neighbours ask.
End of the world 
he replies.
I’d get there first 
if I were 
you.
To boost sales 
up he goes
with nothing 
but
a jacket and
a bagel 
or two.
From the street 
they watch
as he coils 
into 
the blue
becomes a speck 
disappears.
Suddenly 
everyone 
wants a ticket
wants to follow 
too.
So Jake
the second son
takes over 
family trade
he doesn’t want it
to fall 
through.

What’s up there 
neighbours ask.
Rubix the collie 
Grandpa Max
Grandma Sue.
He says, 
I’d get there first 
if I were 
you.
The street
is one big
spiralling 
queue,
caterers set up 
a marquee
offer fresh 
baked bread 
and stew.
Reporters
bring their own
news crew  
ask Jake:
Are you 
the brother 
of the hero guy
who pioneered
into the sky?
That’s all Jake 
needs to hear
to get him up 
those stairs 
too.

What’s up there
neighbours ask.
But Mo
the youngest
prefers his dreams
has no mind 
for ticket schemes.
Most of the street
he says.
My brothers 
too. 
Other than that
I haven’t
a clue.
He says, 
I’d go home 
if I were 
you.
When they insist,
he let’s them 
travel free.
And off they go
in two’s 
and threes.
Kids rest 
on shoulders 
sleeves flap
like wings 
in the breeze.

So many 
people 
walk 
into the sky.
None return
from out of
that blue.
I shouldn’t 
have taken up 
gardening,
Mrs Weinstein
cries.
I think my heart 
will break 
in two.



Friday 18 April 2014

Sky, Cloud, You...


I sit on a bench
in the lamp-post park
and make notes 
on the world.

Yellow jacket skaters
baby pram pushers
fence talkers 
and coffee cup whistlers
scoot along the path.

I write it all down:
how the hawthorns 
have almost fallen over,
how the dogs
fly into the open arms
of clouds,
and then I see

the long hair tied back
the gentle face of a lion
the eyes like water.

The women are calling:
Come on! This way! Come on!
But we sit on the bench
you and I 
and talk 
ten years worth of tales.

Old friend,
you stroll like a miracle
out of the shoe lacers 
and the rucksack joggers
out of this green painting
and into the day.



Thursday 17 April 2014

breakfast after space travel


two eager astronauts 
we board our rocket
strap ourselves in
lap up the sky 
fast as we can

we explore the stars
from sargas to altair
play on lyras harp
hear orb music 
in the silence 
fly on the wing of apus
dizzy with constellations
meet other worlds
they show us 
how we are all dust
we love the taste of oxygen 
we dont need food
our minds grow wide 
fill with particles of light
bathe in ultraviolet
nebula dive 
deep and deep until 
our rocket shakes and smokes
rust metal bits threaten to fall 
we have our fixing kit 
try to fix 
the planet rings 
screw those rocket bits in place

we land on earth
we cant explain 
but i see in your eyes
what 
together
we have seen 

we try to make a normal breakfast
what do people eat for breakfast?
what is normal?
breakfast
two astronauts
sit together at a table
it sounds like
the start of a joke
it seems important to get this right
we sit for hours 
take in the scene
liquid fills the glass
is this milk whiter than the moon?
why do the flakes of bran
not float into the sky like asteroids?
any moment i expect the furniture to drift
gravity is strange
what keeps us sitting here?
i have to take my space suit off
gloved fingers 
cant hold 
so intricate 
an instrument
a spoon

you keep your space helmet on
the visor down
how will you eat?
i like the oxygen you say
its better than the stuff out there
but the world is out there
the table is out there
i am out there
how will i kiss you?



Wednesday 16 April 2014

A Family Visit


These two sisters can’t stop visiting each other. 
Anna is the queen of heaven and earth, 
an A-list celebrity on all the invite lists. 
She learns that her sister, Kiki, queen of the underworld, 
is mourning the death of her husband, Frank. 
He was a complete animal 
but Anna must pay her respects.

Before her journey to the underworld, 
she decks herself out in her designer best. 
She begins her descent, 
only to be stopped at seven security gates during the journey.
(Kiki always was a bit of a control freak.) 
At each gate, Anna is required to give up another symbol of her status: 
her faux fur, 
her Jimmy Choos,
her iPhone, 
all her passwords,
the keys to her Porsche,
her tickets to the Beyoncé concert,
and, at the last gate, her personal trainer, Mike. 
She arrives at Kiki’s domain 
stripped of everything she was, 
completely naked.

The place is a mess of mould and rotting food. 
I love what you’ve done with the place, she says.
What are you doing here? Kiki roars. 
I’ve come to pay my respects, says Anna. 
Your respect makes me want to barf, says Kiki.
It looks like you already did, says Anna. 
Sometimes the shortest of conversations
Are too long.
Kiki kills Anna and hangs her body 
on a meat hook in a corner of her living room. 
Nice, she says. 
Everyone should hang a family portrait on the wall.

But Anna’s no fool.
Before she left California, 
she suspected something might happen. 
She texted her Grandpa, the king of the gods, 
if I’m not back in 3 days come get me xoxo luv u!
Three days and nights drag by.
Kiki watches reruns of The Sopranos
and shoots macabre selfies with Anna’s phone.
Something to remind her of her visit, she says.

When Anna does not return, 
Grandpa creates two therapists 
from the dirt beneath his fingernails, 
(he has real dirty fingernails) 
who descend to the underworld in search of Anna. 
Arriving in Kiki’s living room, they find her freaking out. 
She says: “Oh, my back!" 
They say: “Oh, your back!" 
They show compassion for her pain, 
recommend a good osteopath. 
She is moved by this. 
She offers them anything they desire. They say: 
“We want the corpse hanging from the meat hook in the corner". 
Kiki is pissed off about being tricked out of her sister's corpse, 
but she honours her promise and gives them the body. 
She may be queen of the underworld but she, too, has a code.

The therapists sprinkle spirulina and wheatgrass juice on Anna’s body, 
and are able to revive her. 
I feel great, she says. I must have lost ten pounds! 
The therapists think she looks like shit -
her face too drawn, shadows under her eyes - 
but they keep their mouths shut.
Anna ascends back to California, 
regaining all the regalia of her position 
at each security gate on her return. 
Unfortunately, she was dead during the Beyoncé concert.
This puts her in a bad mood.
When she gets back, she discovers 
that her husband is also an animal. 
He’s been shtooping her PA while she’s been gone.
But it doesn’t matter. 
She knows that Kiki will visit soon 
and then the fun will start again.


Tuesday 15 April 2014

Going to See The Queen


They say every woman is secretly looking 
for that one perfect destiny, 
which can be worn day and night. 
But I wanted a regal destiny 
so I could go and see The Queen.

When I entered the shop,
the sales-assistant took my hands and said:
Every girl deserves her dream destiny 
and we want to help you find it! 
Not only do we offer an incredible price point, 
but all of our destinies are customisable 
so you can really say your destiny was made just for you!

I was amazed at the array:
Rainbow coloured fur, 
silver nets studded with stars,
golden samite, bright as the sun.

The lady frowned and said: 
Why not try a cream-coloured A-line destiny? 
Perfect for that family wedding,  
you can also wear it in the garden, 
while shopping, even while sipping a gin and tonic. 
Simple and plain, it can go anywhere. 
But, I told her, I wanted a regal destiny 
so I could go and see The Queen.

I tried on trapeze destinies fresh from the circus,
the silks and veils of the Arabian Nights,
himalayan prayer shawls scented with incense.
Nothing seemed to fit.

The lady looked concerned: 
Why not try a little black destiny
that creates the ultimate look 
for just about any occasion: 
in the office, at a business dinner, 
dancing the night away or even going to the beach. 

But, I told her, I wanted a regal destiny 
so I could go and see The Queen.

She said: Our destinies feature lace detailing, 
bold floral and new season prints. 
Mini destinies make a statement 
in monochrome tones with flashes of “hot off the runway” shades.
For a summer destiny to be an all-time favourite, 
it has got to be loose, flattering and washable.

And then I saw it:
in cloth the colour of the moon
washed by hand in the sea of shadows
sewn together with invisible threads.

They say you should never pay
for your destiny in cash.
So I took it and fled.
I ran through the streets.
I ran with my moon destiny.
I ran right up to the palace,
and I went to see The Queen.