Collected Poems

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Collected Poems Page 12

by Peter Redgrove


  And if they char too far they can never be turned off again.

  There is another which is the faucet of pouring darkness, my eyes dim,

  I grope, can I ever find it again to stop the darkness coming?

  And there is yet another and this is the worst that seems to give out nothing

  But when you look round there are certain articles missing.

  But mostly they give out good things, sunshine and earth,

  Or milk, or fine silky stuffs that glide out rustling,

  The sleepy evening sounds of a town on the edge of the country

  With rooks cawing as they settle, the clank of a pail, a snatch of radio music,

  (Though I remember another that turned on a soft and continuous cursing

  And from it extruded a pallid foul-mouthed person

  Whose mouth foamed as I turned him off at the chest …)

  But so many of them turn out good things, there is no majority

  Of flowing blood or raw gobbets of flesh, it is mostly

  Womansong, a stream of laughter or of salmon or bright blue pebbles –

  And the lion-headed spigot that gushes mead and mead-hall laughter –

  There are so many giving moonlight and in the day bright sunlight, rich dark barley-wine, and dew …

  In this house of personages that prefer tenants to use the taps and sample the waters

  And best of all to install faucets running with their own personal tastes and choices,

  In the great house of the Reverend Mrs Earth and Doctor Waters

  THE HAUNTED ARMCHAIR26

  ‘… and hid his lord’s money …’ (Matthew 25)

  I want it not it not to go wrong. I want nothing to go wrong.

  I shall guard and hedge and clip to the end of my days

  So that nothing goes wrong. This body, this perfect body

  That came from my mother’s womb undiseased, wholesome,

  No, nothing must go wrong. It is not I. It is not I.

  No, it is not I. I is lodged in its head’s centre,

  Its turret, a little towards its eyes; it is not I, it is not I but it is mine

  And an over-ranking shame to disease it, to let it disease.

  I wash my hands, I wash my hands, I wash my hands once, twice, thrice,

  I rinse my eyes with the sterile saline; I close, I pull the thick curtain,

  I close the door and lock it, once, twice, thrice, I sit, I lie, I sleep in the great armchair,

  And I sleep. Sleep, sleep is the preservative, cultivate sleep, it keeps me perfect.

  No, no, it is not I; I lives only in the turret;

  It is the body, it is the body, it is the body is the loved thing,

  It is from my mother, it is my mother’s

  It came from my mother, it is an organ of the body of my mother

  And I shall keep it with no rough touch upon it

  No rough disease to ramp up and down in it. The world?

  And the world? That is the mind’s. In the turret. And now I will sleep.

  I will sleep now, for my body exists. That is enough.

  Something wakes me. Is it the fire?

  It crackles like a speech. The buffet of winds, the cracks

  Of the beams, the taste of the sun, the swimming shark of the moon?

  No, I think, no, I think, I think I hear time flowing,

  No, I think I hear time eroding, the cinder withering in the grate,

  The grate withering with the time, my hands raised to my eyes

  Where my eyes are withering, I look close at my withering hands. How long?

  How much time have I seen withering? Did I come here today?

  Suddenly everything grants me withering. Shall I sit here again?

  The body is gone. I sit here alone. A nothing, a virgin memory.

  A grease-spot. A dirty chair-back.

  FRANKENSTEIN IN THE FOREST

  ‘I am afraid for the meat

  Of my illegitimate son

  In the warm autumn.

  When will the lightning come?’

  Much wisdom had congregated there

  In the open-air laboratory which is a cemetery

  Under the great oaks

  In the litter of acorns:

  Mute parcels of impending forests.

  There are grim-mouthed toads

  Flocked round a boulder of quartz

  Deep, complex and prodigious

  That gloams in its depths

  And twitches there as with a flutter of lightning.

  On a portable radio

  The size of a hymn-book

  A harpsichord plays Scarlatti,

  It suffers an attack of amnesia

  As the lightning steers near.

  The darkness has eaten everything except his face

  The alert wise face

  Backed by a view of tossing trees,

  The bones of his skull

  Are as loose as the leaves of the forest,

  ‘I will send lightning through him

  It will live under his skin

  It will heal his mouldering

  Undead bric-à-brac of other men.

  There are so many bibles

  Without a crack of light;

  Mine has pages of slate

  With fossils clearly inscribed,

  Leather from racehorses

  And crocodiles,

  Thin frying leaves of electricity

  That lies obediently in its place,

  Man-skin, oak-bark and quartz. …’

  The marble grave-stones

  Are covered with equations

  In the master’s quick black analytick crayon,

  Their stone books open at only one page;

  ‘It is my great lightning son

  Dressed in metal and bark

  And the limbs of departed men,

  Lightning peers out of his eyes;

  He will heal their mouldering.

  It is time

  To raise him on the sizzling platform.’

  The lightning makes a blue cave of the forest,

  It strikes violently at a hawthorn tree,

  A sweet smell fills the air,

  It has blossomed heavily.

  Now the bright blue

  Thistling sparks have stuck to his poles,

  His crystal machine

  Fills with spangled golden oil.

  His golden beehives’ buzz rises to a wail

  And the monster ascends on its winches,

  The clouds draw up their heavy black pews

  The rain falls

  And the lightning services.

  The storm clears.

  Cloud-men are digging

  Deep blue graves in the sky.

  Out of the machine steps

  The man, mute, complex and prodigious,

  His clothes flickering with electricity,

  His first murder not due until tomorrow.

  THE HALF-SCISSORS

  Humming water holds the high stars.

  Meteors fall through the great fat icicles.

  Spiders at rest from skinny leg-work

  Lean heads forward on shaggy head-laces

  All glittering from an askew moon in the sky:

  One hinge snapped; a white door dislocated.

  The night leans forward on this thin window;

  Next door, tattered glass,

  Wind twittering on jagged edges.

  Doors beat like wings wishing to rise.

  I lean forward to this thin fire.

  A woman leaves – even the flames grow cool –

  She is a one hinge snapped, I am a half-scissors.

  DR FAUST’S SEA-SPIRAL SPIRIT

  For Julie Kendrick

  I am frightened. It makes velvet feel too tall.

  Its crest peers in at the library window and I cannot open the books,

  They hug themselves shut like limpets months after it has gone.

  The roses have learnt to thunder,
/>   They spread petals like peals of red thunder echoing,

  The sky looks like blue boxes of white powder being smashed by grey fists.

  God is an angel in an angel, and a stone in a stone,

  But everything enters this, and is gone.

  That cry makes everything look afraid

  And how small a whisper do we hear of him

  Merely the brushing of his outer garment.

  It passes pallidly over the meadow

  And suddenly it is brilliant with pollen

  It will now seek out female fields of flowers

  It cannot help that, they will draw him.

  It will pass through a field of bulls

  And every hair will be stripped

  And every bone broken

  But the seed will spin on

  A column of translucent horn pulled to the cows

  Its seething tip.

  It will so use a city

  For the sake of one woman.

  It destroyed an archipelago.

  It was selecting human organs and a dhoti.

  It reverses direction and is a person

  For I have spoken to him, and he inhales deeply

  And thinks deeply, and he speaks and he ceases speaking

  Then there is an unforgettable perfume on the air

  The woman to fit which I will seek for ever,

  And an unforgettable tune for her to walk to.

  That cry makes everything look afraid.

  The bones float up to the ceiling and the iron bar bends.

  It strips a whale for its immense bones

  And stands the empty meat on its tail.

  The rapid alteration of perfumes in it

  Will kill with alternation of memories.

  It is a shop of carpets furling and unfurling.

  The plain pinafores alert themselves

  And are a hive of angry spots.

  It is a house of wineglasses and towering butter and cabbages

  And its scream is the cry of wool under torment

  Or a silk scream, and it is constructed like buttons

  And I cannot hear what he is saying

  For the wool-and-bone

  Screaming at me of his buttons.

  Yet the practised shaman

  Drums until it appears,

  Runs up its sides and travels the whole earth over,

  Pees over its crown, a magical act

  It is his glass ladder to heaven, his magical cannon

  That can be fired once only, what nonsense!

  Master Alice descended it, inspecting the good things

  Arrayed on its shelves, it may also be summoned

  By wounding the air upwards

  With a rifle, or by burning Dresden

  (There it was seen spinning between

  Ranks of buildings gustily burning,

  Casting light from winged chevrons), or

  By laying the Tarot in an anti-clockwise pattern.

  I suspect it and its wife are responsible for Moses’ head

  And the ten great transmissions whose echoes never stop

  Piped along the pair of them hurt my head too

  Among all the others.

  It will also let down as on a four-cornered cloth

  Ancient gifts and treasures, such as

  A whole slum of Ambergris like a

  Giant’s pock-marked skull in curly earwax.

  God was found with his head poxed to the bone

  He had walked through a hungry cloud of it

  It is everywhere it is one and many

  It is ships of the desert-seas that sail fleets of it

  It stands in linked chains on a calm among icebergs

  It is playing its enormous chess and takes a berg with one of itself

  Crashing a boom, and it takes each other

  With a twang like a bridge breaking,

  At Christmas dinner I have cracked it

  Out of the brown dust of a walnut and as the bathwater runs out

  It tickles my toes, it is manifold behind the iron doors

  Of the neglected casemate, swinging

  And breathing in restless thickets,

  They say space is sewn of it and I have seen it pouring through the telescope

  There it is at the north pole shining with the moon

  And with the midnight sun, go to the south pole you will find it there too,

  And between them they keep us all spinning

  Growing so tall their crests freeze and throw off

  Ice-circlets sparkling, flying diadem upon diadem

  Called UFO by the observers, scrutinizing our latitudes.

  And yet I have known it

  Stand still at my right hand long enough

  I have opened the little cupboard in its flank

  And plucked out the small brown monkey who lives there

  Who became my friend and stayed with me a good while.

  It wrenched itself from the head, and the head listened with its lack,

  It wrenched itself from the rock, and the snail crept in its wake.

  To Red Indians it always carries a dead spider gently in its buzzing jaws

  As the refugee mother carries her dead baby many miles in the dusk.

  The anatomist tells me I have a pair of small idols of it set in my head

  That are the kernel of hearing: the tone-deaf apparition

  Is a river on tiptoe, rhythmically digesting its own bed.

  But it is also a band of eyes and a solid wall of God

  Seeking embrace, and it is the great one from the North

  That opens like theatre-curtains and there are four beasts marching

  With a man on a throne inside, but I know too

  That it sets with a click and leaves skimming on the waves

  The great pearly nautilus that lets out its sails and scuds gently off

  Its inhabitant glowing dimly through the thin shell walls

  A coil of luminous foam by night and a swimming red bone by day.

  Thus it seems to me. To itself

  It is trees, with high leafy galleries

  And scrolls of steel, equation-shaped; a man, bearded,

  Strolls up its staircase, a bird

  Alights on its branches. With our spiral stairs

  We have built it homage, it mounts itself in homage

  To its own perfected double helix; that crucifix

  Dangling between your breasts is a long-section of it.

  Like the unicorn’s horn it is male and female at once

  And emits waves of all lengths from intense internal friction,

  It will make a white sound on your transistor

  Though a few notes of church organ might fly together:

  Chance will have it so among all the other sounds;

  And the electricity that branches through its lacquered walls

  Is of a purer fine than armature-power, that whining sham;

  You can time a great clock on its global pulse.

  It is the pouring tower of pebbles

  That walks the coast glittering in the cool evening,

  It is trees among trees that are trees

  Until it decides to leave the forest by revolution.

  But men have pinned the giant down in clocks and churches

  I watch its face wounded hour after hour

  Behind the glass of my bedside clock,

  Hacked into numbers, plucked

  By enumerating metal

  Welded inside a castle:

  Within its fortress-windows rounded axes

  Powered by its replica in metal

  Chink like milled money

  Fiscal time

  But I would love to go to the church

  And be served by its priest

  In whirling petticoats

  Where the Host

  Greasy with electricities

  Flies into our mouths

  Like flocks of roasted pigeons.

  It changes place
s

  With Job continually.

  It carries seven directions in itself

  And five elements,

  Music, and thunder,

  And small gods laughing with patient happiness.

  Slice it low down and find a fish

  Lower still, granite and chrysoprase

  Fairly high, the embryo babe in water

  Higher still, his wail winds out of the wound

  He travels at youth-speeds

  In the slimmer reaches

  Moves zodiac-slow with beards

  Through the greater girths.

  I take a sip

  From the cup chained to its waist.

  Faust shunted himself.

  Indeed he tamed it

  Peered through the sea in it

  Inspected the mountain for gems.

  I saw him bounding over the Carpathians

  Like a child on a pogo-stick.

  To cheat the devil he was interred in it four hundred years.

  Its grip over the land has eased.

  Warm summer breezes

  Flow from its palm

  Faust strolls happily

  Through its flowering palms.

  At the bow, the atom; at the stern, the zodiac.

  The atomic bomb is a bad picture of it, clumsy and without versatility,

  It discriminates not at all, and there are too many bad things to say about it,

  I will not spend time on that figment of the thing I am talking about.

  It hums like a top and its voice smashes volcanoes,

  Yet it will burrow and from the riflings of Etna

  Speed skyward, hurtling pillar of red rock.

  The mouth is not necessarily a one-way trip

  Though you should take plenty of room.

  It has shaggy lips, a necklace of pines.

  It electrifies Perranporth sand-dunes

  Every grain crackles and hums

  In flickering organ-notes under

  My blue slippered prints.

  It is a great traveller and sometimes slips

  Up its own back-passage to assuage its terrible wander lusts.

  When men and women embrace

  They impersonate it

  They are a cone of power

  An unbuilt beehive

  We two are a brace of them behaving as one

  We invaginate, evaginate,

  Time stops inside us.

  In it the ticking

  Of innumerable stolen clocks

  Welds to an organ-note.

  It is sometimes made of lightning

  And at others nothing but magnetism.

  It is a kind of knot

  Too intricate to undo

  Too virile to pull tight.

  Untied, a world explodes,

  Tied, it winks out.

 

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