Gay Love Poetry
Page 11
Throughout that year, Chris had sat two desks ahead of me.
First in our class to wear flared trousers,
he knew irregular Greek verbs and the Russian for
‘I understand the lesson for today.’
I didn’t and don’t.
I know that at the end of Glasnost' is a sound
my language can’t write down.
The ‘soft sign’, they call it. It’s a little
'tch’ of tenderness, a gentle chafing of the teeth and tongue.
No, that’s not it.
‘But you can say it, can’t you? And who was Chris?’ Alastair
pours us beers. ‘And Lenin — for Christ's sake, Lenin!’
Decades on, two pairs of flares hang
embarrassed in my wardrobe. I open the window
on an August night in London, and the raining random noise
spits in and on:
traffic; the pulse of music from the Seventh Day Adventist Hall;
a dog two streets away,
barking with furious thirst or boredom,
chafing at the chain of speech he does not have.
In the paper Boris Zhikov, aged 16,
clutches his signed lp above a headline:
Children of Perestroika Meet the Pet Shop Boys.
I close and lock the window.
I watch my video of Horovitz
playing at last again in Moscow after sixty years.
Rachmaninov, Scriabin, Schumann’s Kinderszenen.
During the ‘Traumerei’ encore, a tear slides down an old man’s cheek.
‘The trouble with your poems is,’ says Alastair,
‘you don't say enough about your feelings.’
I rehearse the phrases that have stayed:
Kak menya zavoot? and Shto delat'?
What do they call me? What is to be done?
A sound of tenderness, is it?
The teeth against the tongue.
‘But you can say it, cant you?’ Alastair repeats.
He finishes his beer and grins again.
‘And by the way that isn’t how you spell my name.’
The dictionary I found this summer translates
Glasnost' as, not ‘openness’, but ‘publicity’.
At its end is something I can’t yet write down.
GREGORY WOODS
Reconciliation
If there were dancers, they were not dancing. If there was a tree,
It had not emerged from the rock. Potential was enough.
Fish, if there were fish, confined themselves discreetly to the dark
Angles in the shadow of the overhang, if the moon was out
For casting shadows. (Say, for the sake of the moment, it was.)
In the presence of the dust, we celebrated our return
To sanity. It was the dust we tasted on each others skin —
You could say we made mud of it. Adapting our accustomed
Falsehoods to the requirement of the time, we reduced each others
Serious intensity to laughter, an excuse for tears.
If there was a clock, hidden under blankets in a basket
Or thieved by brigands in the night, it would not for want of winding
Stop. We were reconciled to that. I slept in your armpit, dreaming,
If there were dreams, of you: you in the mountains, you on horseback,
You at the cash-and-carry. There was a sentence which recurred
In every episode. I knew it was the same but couldn’t
Have repeated any single word of it on waking up.
Who said it, you or I or the kid at the check-out, was open
To interpretation. I think I spoke it when you woke me
But your kisses tightened on me like a buckled rubber gag.
The dancers, waiting for the music which their grace relies on,
Did stretching exercises in the mirror, not one of them
Indifferent to his neighbours sweat. An earthquake or at least
A pompous thunderstorm could have served our need for an event:
Pylons struck by lightning, gigantic hail stones, children screaming scared.
But above a crag surmounted by a dry stone wall, the sky
Did nothing suitably dramatic to confirm our mood.
The clouds were indistinct, the light uncertain. If there were trees,
They prospered undisturbed. If I shuddered when you clung to me,
It was because your hands were cold; if not, forget I mentioned them.
The coastguard s bell, the car alarm, cats on the fire escape, all
Made their token efforts and failed. The dancers retreated to
The locker room, affecting an impassioned manliness as rough
As the covers which slid to the floor, leaving us bare but not cold.
To the presence of the dust we celebrated our return.
FORBES
Robert
Its so stretchy today
Wet grey Sunday,
Lets go back to bed with coffee and toast
Palm Sunday bells ringing,
And roll around in that crumby bed,
Sex, radio, doze,
And did I hear someone mention that word love?
No? well never mind
Its just so stretchy today with you.
STEVE CRANFIELD
The Testament
for Bryan
Ming not your lufe with fals deceptioun.
Beir in your mynd this short conclusioun
Of fair Cresseid — as I have said befoir;
Sen scho is deid,
I speik of hir no moir.
Henryson, The Testament of Cresseid
‘You must write me a poem some day ...
Provided its something you really mean
I can be patient,’ I heard you say
Once, blowing smoke-rings from the bed
As I unbalanced, one leg into my jeans.
Only when I’d opened, fully dressed,
Your ‘special gift’ — a biro and blank pad —
Did I wake up to a serious request.
What’s it to me, though, anonymised Lines to Y?
Or the authorised task of staining paper sheets
As an alternative to sex?
Wasn’t it the bane of writers in the past,
Having to be in sync with the dictates
Of pea-brained nobles, God or The Mistress?
Well-heeled academics feel ‘coerced’
By equivalent calls from the Murdoch press.
Maybe I read too much into your present,
Detecting hints of ‘All this was commission
But were you equal to it?’ I wasn’t.
Commissions, poems, end. Lust, likewise, vanishes.
Not that I gave much weight to your opposition
The day I declined to end things over-the-top:
An unfussed character, shorn of flourishes.
I know the value of the one full stop.
And yet, I find myself writing the thing
You asked for but would feel puzzled to receive
(You shan’t), the whole time wondering
What it is prompts me to arrange words unsaid,
Unsayable, to you in person, deceives
Me into thinking I can beyond where
Henryson left his polished-off Cresseid:
‘Sen scho is deid, I speik of hir no moir.’
His stern anti-metaphysical tact
(Rare in a medieval) pulls me up short
With its callous, matter-of-fact
Reminder that deception has its limits.
Obeying your one proviso never taught
Me to doubt that meant poems haunt the lonely
Or that, for all would-be securities, its
The idiot who writes to commissions only.
PETER DANIELS
Assessment
David Jones lacks motivation.
He has failed to achiev
e his targets
for three months. His timekeeping is poor.
His attitude leaves much to be desired.
Davids appearance is hard to fault
and I must say he does attract
attention, but somehow it’s always
in the wrong way. It’s fine to look good
but sales must always be our number one priority.
David is brilliant but erratic. The clients
find him unsettling. His smile
can undermine office morale for days
and days. Last week I pulled him up
for an untidy desk, and his face
lit the room most embarrassingly.
His carefree songs at the computer
can move certain colleagues to tears, which
is bad for productivity.
This kind of thing gets personal,
and management’s no picnic at the best of times.
It can’t go on.
For the good of our company I shall have to
let him go. I can’t hold on to an employee like David.
DAVID KINLOCH
Bed
for Eric
The moment the light goes out,
He sleeps: a gift from the dark.
There is the small chime
Of the moon on the wall,
The deep freeze digesting
In the kitchen. He floats
From head to toe on the buzz
Of his snore, dreaming the calm
Glide of a Jaspar ski-lift,
The summer elk that trotted
Out of forest beneath our
Dangling feet. His arm
Crooks the violin of my head.
I elbow him away intent on
Sleep but suddenly unpegged
By a gust of dreams we roll
Together in the hot hole
Of his mums old bed,
Dribbling on the pillows.
Waking, he has me in an
Arm-lock, our legs a single
Rope of flesh, my ear-lobe
Tickled by his breath. I reach
Behind me and shove my hand
Between his thighs. He stretches,
Opening briefly like a centre-
Fold, a light smile of welcome
On his lips. But more than this
Is the scrape of the two-o’clock
Beetle, the nip of a dust-mite,
My scratch: my love disturbed
By me, awake but patient
In the dark.
STEVE ANTHONY
A Good Fit
A score of hopefuls, then we fitted:
same height, same build, a pairing so neat
I’d wear your jeans to hug me tight
and we’d stroll touch-close along the street
counting the smiles. We made love all the time —
morning and night, the long light
afternoons, in bed, or the rougher climb
of the stairs, the sink, everywhere was right.
The best time, on the living room rug,
I followed your skin like the coast on a map,
you spread your legs and I backed in, snug,
your arms closing round me, moored in your lap.
Then we locked together to pull and collide,
two men matched in sweat and feeling,
till we lay back, done in, side by side,
laughing up to the stucco ceiling.
For days we didn’t bother with clothes.
Evenings, cuddled out the colder weather;
unless we’d filled them with wine and friends
to show how good we were together ...
But in dancing crowds we came apart,
slipped off into the world again;
I was left out on the midnight street
like a fashionable shoe in the rain.
JOEL LANE
Sandman
You know what the day feels like
after a sleepless night. A coach station
in late spring, rainy with voices,
dissent beaten down by unconcern;
or travelling back from the coast
with sand grains lodged in the folds
of your clothes. The light is cramped.
You never clear the oxygen debt.
Meanwhile, the latent dreams will
have their say in daylight:
a furious proliferation of images,
layer on layer of thin action, compressed;
pages the censor and the pornographer
sat up together to make. Some people
behave as though they never slept;
their memories are only skin deep.
Dreams is too comfortable a word
for the thoughts of mine you hold
in restless hands, a cats cradle
that you can t tighten or unpick.
Does it make you feel strong
to play the sandman with me
like this, to hurt and comfort?
It sounds bitter now, to say:
when I slept with you, the best thing,
and sometimes the only thing, was the sleep.
PETER WYLES
Bird Flight
Frost on the bare ribs of ploughed earth,
the low V of ducks over mist and water,
the turn of a high bird against the sky,
first one way, a call, and then the other.
Last night on my hands and in my mouth,
two fists of wool, the smell of smoke,
and in a pocket his unearned lighter.
What I look for is wherever I am,
what has to be said cannot be said,
staring to the core of this frozen flower.
First one way, a call, and then the other.
ADAM JOHNSON
Unscheduled Stop
I sit in the Charles Hallé
At windy Manningtree,
While gulls enact their ballet
Above the estuary.
‘We seem to have some problem ...’
A faltering voice explains.
I spy, along the platform,
A sign: ‘Beware of trains’
And picture you, impatient,
In the car park at the back
Of a gaudy toy-town station,
Or craning down the track,
As the afternoon rehearses
An evensong of birds —
Our time in the hands of others,
And too brief for words.
LAWRENCE SCHIMEL
Palimpsest
Can you feel, as your fingers dance across
my back, the marks of all the men
who’ve touched me before you -
their fingers clawing stripes across my flesh
as we made love, or kneading deep,
as you do, massaging away tension, stress?
I feel that even their lightest caresses
have scarred me permanently, branding me
as surely as the kiss of leather straps and whips.
Is it some sleight-of-hand trick you do
that makes my body feel fresh and pure?
What is this legerdemain that, although your hands
have travelled this stretch of flesh so many
times before, this path stretching from shoulder
down along the spine to the ass, that makes it seem
new each time, that this is unexplored territory?
Surely your fingers must feel the imprints
of all those earlier passions, as they now awaken
such strong feelings in me again. I open my
mouth to tell you, as I lie before you, naked and
pliable, but your fingers press deep
into muscle — and I lose all will.
V BORDERLINES
____________________________
Several of this group are ungendered love poems which have been gratefully adopted by gay men, beginning with a favourite
of my own (Fulke Greville’s ‘Absence, the noble truce ...’) and including a couple suggested by other contributors to this book. Perhaps the most controversial of these is the extract from Peter Grimes, which hardly looks like a love poem; but it seems beyond doubt that Crabbe’s twentieth-century admirers E.M. Forster and, thanks to him, Benjamin Britten, were drawn by the poem’s homosexual sub-text and that the relationship between Grimes and his apprentices is one of thwarted love.
I’ve also included two eighteenth-century extracts — by Pope and Churchill — which are about gay love: the period is otherwise under-represented, and it may be salutary to have some indication of how others see (or rather saw) us.
FULKE GREVILLE
from Caelica
Absence, the noble truce Of Cupid’s war:
Where though desires want use,
They honoured are.
Thou art the just protection
Of prodigal affection,
Have thou the praise;
When bankrupt Cupid braveth,
Thy mines his credit saveth,
With sweet delays.
Of wounds which presence makes
With beauty’s shot,
Absence the anguish slakes,
But healeth not:
Absence records the stories,
Wherein desire glories,
Although she burn;
She cherisheth the spirits
Where constancy inherits
And passions mourn.
Absence, like dainty clouds,