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Selected Poems (1968-2014)

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by Paul Muldoon




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  from NEW WEATHER

  Wind and Tree

  In the way that the most of the wind

  Happens where there are trees,

  Most of the world is centred

  About ourselves.

  Often where the wind has gathered

  The trees together and together,

  One tree will take

  Another in her arms and hold.

  Their branches that are grinding

  Madly together and together,

  It is no real fire.

  They are breaking each other.

  Often I think I should be like

  The single tree, going nowhere,

  Since my own arm could not and would not

  Break the other. Yet by my broken bones

  I tell new weather.

  Dancers at the Moy

  This Italian square

  And circling plain

  Black once with mares

  And their stallions,

  The flat Blackwater

  Turning its stones

  Over hour after hour

  As their hooves shone

  And lifted together

  Under the black rain,

  One or other Greek war

  Now coloured the town

  Blacker than ever before

  With hungry stallions

  And their hungry mares

  Like hammocks of skin,

  The flat Blackwater

  Unable to contain

  Itself as horses poured

  Over acres of grain

  In a black and gold river.

  No band of Athenians

  Arrived at the Moy fair

  To buy for their campaign,

  Peace having been declared

  And a treaty signed.

  The black and gold river

  Ended as a trickle of brown

  Where those horses tore

  At briars and whins,

  Ate the flesh of each other

  Like people in famine.

  The flat Blackwater

  Hobbled on its stones

  With a wild stagger

  And sag in its backbone,

  The local people gathered

  Up the white skeletons.

  Horses buried for years

  Under the foundations

  Give their earthen floors

  The ease of trampolines.

  Good Friday, 1971. Driving Westward

  It was good going along with the sun

  Through Ballygawley, Omagh and Strabane.

  I started out as it was getting light

  And caught sight of hares all along the road

  That looked to have been taking a last fling,

  Doves making the most of their offerings

  As if all might not be right with the day

  Where I moved through morning towards the sea.

  I was glad that I would not be alone.

  Those children who travel badly as wine

  Waved as they passed in their uppity cars

  And now the first cows were leaving the byres,

  The first lorry had delivered its load.

  A whole country was fresh after the night

  Though people were still fighting for the last

  Dreams and changing their faces where I paused

  To read the first edition of the truth.

  I gave a lift to the girl out of love

  And crossed the last great frontier at Lifford.

  Marooned by an iffing and butting herd

  Of sheep, Letterkenny had just then laid

  Open its heart and we passed as new blood

  Back into the grey flesh of Donegal.

  The sky went out of its way for the hills

  And life was changing down for the sharp bends

  Where the road had put its thin brown arm round

  A hill and held on tight out of pure fear.

  Errigal stepped out suddenly in our

  Path and the thin arm tightened round the waist

  Of the mountain and for a time I lost

  Control and she thought we hit something big

  But I had seen nothing, perhaps a stick

  Lying across the road. I glanced back once

  And there was nothing but a heap of stones.

  We had just dropped in from nowhere for lunch

  In Gaoth Dobhair, I happy and she convinced

  Of the death of more than lamb or herring.

  She stood up there and then, face full of drink,

  And announced that she and I were to blame

  For something killed along the way we came.

  Children were warned that it was rude to stare,

  Left with their parents for a breath of air.

  Hedgehog

  The snail moves like a

  Hovercraft, held up by a

  Rubber cushion of itself,

  Sharing its secret

  With the hedgehog. The hedgehog

  Shares its secret with no one.

  We say, Hedgehog, come out

  Of yourself and we will love you.

  We mean no harm. We want

  Only to listen to what

  You have to say. We want

  Your answers to our questions.

  The hedgehog gives nothing

  Away, keeping itself to itself.

  We wonder what a hedgehog

  Has to hide, why it so distrusts.

  We forget the god

  Under this crown of thorns.

  We forget that never again

  Will a god trust in the world.

  The Year of the Sloes, for Ishi

  In the Moon

  Of Frost in the Tepees,

  There were two stars

  That got free.

  They yawned and stretched

  To white hides,

  One cutting a slit

  In the wall of itself

  And stepping out into the night.

  In the Moon

  Of the Dark Red Calf,

  It had learned

  To track itself

  By following the dots

  And dashes of its blood.

  It knew the silence

  Deeper

  Than that of birds not singing.

  In the Moon

  Of the Snowblind,

  The other fed the fire

  At its heart

  With the dream of a deer

  Over its shoulder.

  One water would wade through another,

  Shivering,

  Salmon of Knowledge leap the Fall.

  In the Moon

  Of the Red Grass Appearing,

  He discovered her

  Lying under a bush.

  There were patches of yellowed

  Snow and ice

  Where the sun had not looked.

  He helped her over the Black Hills


  To the Ford of the Two Friends.

  In the Moon

  Of the Ponies Shedding,

  He practised counting coups,

  Knowing it harder

  To live at the edge of the earth

  Than its centre.

  He caught the nondescript horse

  And stepped

  Down onto the prairies.

  In the Moon

  Of Making the Fat,

  He killed his first bison.

  Her quick knife ran under the skin

  And offered the heart

  To the sky.

  They had been the horizon.

  She saved what they could not eat

  That first evening.

  In the Moon

  Of the Red Cherries,

  She pledged that she would stay

  So long as there would be

  The Two-Legged

  And the Four-Legged Ones,

  Long as grass would grow and water

  Flow, and the wind blow.

  None of these things had forgotten.

  In the Moon

  Of the Black Cherries,

  While he was looking for a place

  To winter,

  He discovered two wagons

  Lying side by side

  That tried to be a ring.

  There were others in blue shirts

  Felling trees for a square.

  In the Moon

  When the Calf Grows Hair,

  There was a speck in the sky

  Where he had left the tepee.

  An eagle had started

  Out of her side

  And was waiting to return.

  The fire was not cold,

  The feet of six horses not circles.

  In the Moon

  Of the Season Changing,

  He left the river

  Swollen with rain.

  He kicked sand over the fire.

  He prepared his breast

  By an ochre

  That none would see his blood.

  Any day now would be good to die.

  In the Moon

  Of the Leaves Falling,

  I had just taken a bite out of the

  Moon and pushed the plate

  Of the world away.

  Someone was asking for six troopers

  Who had lain down

  One after another

  To drink a shrieking river.

  In the Moon

  Of the Trees Popping, two snails

  Glittered over a dead Indian.

  I realized that if his brothers

  Could be persuaded to lie still,

  One beside the other

  Right across the Great Plains,

  Then perhaps something of this original

  Beauty would be retained.

  from MULES

  Ned Skinner

  Was ‘a barbaric yawp’,

  If you took Aunt Sarah at her word.

  He would step over the mountain

  Of a summer afternoon

  To dress a litter of pigs

  On my uncle’s farm.

  Aunt Sarah would keep me in,

  Taking me on her lap

  Till it was over.

  Ned Skinner wiped his knife

  And rinsed his hands

  In the barrel at the door-step.

  He winked, and gripped my arm.

  ‘It doesn’t hurt, not so’s you’d notice,

  And God never slams one door

  But another’s lying open.

  Them same pigs can see the wind.’

  My uncle had given him five shillings.

  Ned Skinner came back

  While my uncle was in the fields.

  ‘Sarah,’ he was calling, ‘Sarah.

  You weren’t so shy in our young day.

  You remember yon time in Archer’s loft?’

  His face blazed at the scullery window.

  ‘Remember? When the hay was won.’

  Aunt Sarah had the door on the snib.

  ‘That’s no kind of talk

  To be coming over. Now go you home.’

  Silence. Then a wheeze.

  We heard the whiskey-jug

  Tinkle, his boots diminish in the yard.

  Aunt Sarah put on a fresh apron.

  Ma

  Old photographs would have her bookish, sitting

  Under a willow. I take that to be a croquet

  Lawn. She reads aloud, no doubt from Rupert Brooke.

  The month is always May or June.

  Or with the stranger on the motor-bike.

  Not my father, no. This one’s all crew-cut

  And polished brass buttons.

  An American soldier, perhaps.

  And the full moon

  Swaying over Keenaghan, the orchards and the cannery,

  Thins to a last yellow-hammer, and goes.

  The neighbours gather, all Keenaghan and Collegelands,

  There is story-telling. Old miners at Coalisland

  Going into the ground. Swinging, for fear of the gas,

  The soft flame of a canary.

  The Mixed Marriage

  My father was a servant-boy.

  When he left school at eight or nine

  He took up billhook and loy

  To win the ground he would never own.

  My mother was the school-mistress,

  The world of Castor and Pollux.

  There were twins in her own class.

  She could never tell which was which.

  She had read one volume of Proust,

  He knew the cure for farcy.

  I flitted between a hole in the hedge

  And a room in the Latin Quarter.

  When she had cleared the supper-table

  She opened The Acts of the Apostles,

  Aesop’s Fables, Gulliver’s Travels.

  Then my mother went on upstairs

  And my father further dimmed the light

  To get back to hunting with ferrets

  Or the factions of the faction-fights,

  The Ribbon Boys, the Caravats.

  Duffy’s Circus

  Once Duffy’s Circus had shaken out its tent

  In the big field near the Moy

  God may as well have left Ireland

  And gone up a tree. My father had said so.

  There was no such thing as the five-legged calf,

  The God of Creation

  Was the God of Love.

  My father chose to share such Nuts of Wisdom.

  Yet across the Alps of each other the elephants

  Trooped. Nor did it matter

  When Wild Bill’s Rain Dance

  Fell flat. Some clown emptied a bucket of stars

  Over the swankiest part of the crowd.

  I had lost my father in the rush and slipped

  Out the back. Now I heard

  For the first time that long-drawn-out cry.

  It came from somewhere beyond the corral.

  A dwarf on stilts. Another dwarf.

  I sidled past some trucks. From under a freighter

  I watched a man sawing a woman in half.

  Mules

  Should they not have the best of both worlds?

  Her feet of clay gave the lie

  To the star burned in our mare’s brow.

  Would Parsons’ jackass not rest more assured

  That cross wrenched from his shoulders?

  We had loosed them into one field.

  I watched Sam Parsons and my quick father

  Tense for the punch below their belts,

  For what was neither one thing or the other.

  It was as though they had shuddered

  To think, of their gaunt, sexless foal

  Dropped tonight in the cowshed.

  We might yet claim that it sprang from earth

  Were it not for the afterbirth

  Trailed like some fine, silk parachute,

  That we would know from what heights i
t fell.

  from WHY BROWNLEE LEFT

  The Weepies

  Most Saturday afternoons

  At the local Hippodrome

  Saw the Pathé News rooster,

  Then the recurring dream

  Of a lonesome drifter

  Through uninterrupted range.

  Will Hunter, so gifted

  He could peel an orange

  In a single, fluent gesture,

  Was the leader of our gang.

  The curtain rose this afternoon

  On a lion, not a gong.

  When the crippled girl

  Who wanted to be a dancer

  Met the married man

  Who was dying of cancer,

  Our hankies unfurled

  Like flags of surrender.

  I believe something fell asunder

  In even Will Hunter’s hands.

  Cuba

  My eldest sister arrived home that morning

  In her white muslin evening dress.

  ‘Who the hell do you think you are,

  Running out to dances in next to nothing?

  As though we hadn’t enough bother

  With the world at war, if not at an end.’

  My father was pounding the breakfast-table.

  ‘Those Yankees were touch and go as it was –

  If you’d heard Patton in Armagh –

  But this Kennedy’s nearly an Irishman

  So he’s not much better than ourselves.

  And him with only to say the word.

  If you’ve got anything on your mind

  Maybe you should make your peace with God.’

  I could hear May from beyond the curtain.

  ‘Bless me, Father, for I have sinned.

  I told a lie once, I was disobedient once.

  And, Father, a boy touched me once.’

  ‘Tell me, child. Was this touch immodest?

  Did he touch your breast, for example?’

  ‘He brushed against me, Father. Very gently.’

  Anseo

  When the Master was calling the roll

  At the primary school in Collegelands,

  You were meant to call back Anseo

  And raise your hand

  As your name occurred.

  Anseo, meaning here, here and now,

  All present and correct,

  Was the first word of Irish I spoke.

  The last name on the ledger

  Belonged to Joseph Mary Plunkett Ward

  And was followed, as often as not,

  By silence, knowing looks,

  A nod and a wink, the Master’s droll

  ‘And where’s our little Ward-of-court?’

  I remember the first time he came back

 

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