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The Wrecking Light

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by Robin Robertson




  The Wrecking Light

  Robin Robertson

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  I. SILVERED WATER

  ALBUM

  SIGNS ON A WHITE FIELD

  BY CLACHAN BRIDGE

  TULIPS

  THE PLAGUE YEAR

  WONDERLAND

  THE TWEED

  ABOUT TIME

  FALL FROM GRACE

  GOING TO GROUND

  CAT, FAILING

  A GIFT

  STRINDBERG IN BERLIN

  VENERY

  MY GIRLS

  TINSEL

  LEAVING ST KILDA

  II. BROKEN WATER

  LAW OF THE ISLAND

  KALIGHAT

  RELIGION

  PENTHEUS AND DIONYSUS

  LESSON

  THE DAUGHTERS OF MINYAS

  AN AMBUSH

  ODE TO A LARGE TUNA IN THE MARKET

  GRAVE GOODS

  ALBATROSS IN CO. ANTRIM

  THE GREAT MIDWINTER SACRIFICE, UPPSALA

  WEB

  THE HAMMAM

  THE ACT OF DISTRESS

  WHITE

  III. UNSPOKEN WATER

  THE WOOD OF LOST THINGS

  MIDDLE WATCH, HAMMERSMITH

  LANDFALL

  CALLING HOME

  ICTUS

  THE UNWRITTEN LETTER

  BEGINNING TO GREEN

  DURING DINNER

  ARSENIO

  DRESS REHEARSALS

  EASTER, LIGURIA

  WIDOW'S WALK

  DIVING

  ABANDON

  AT ROANE HEAD

  HAMMERSMITH WINTER

  NOTES & ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Acknowledgements are due to the editors of the following:

  First U.S. edition

  Copyright © 2011 by Robin Robertson

  All rights reserved

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book,

  write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company,

  215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  www.hmhbooks.com

  First published in Great Britain by Picador, 2010

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Robertson, Robin, date.

  The wrecking light / Robin Robertson.—1st U.S. ed.

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-0-547-48333-7

  I. Title.

  PR6068.O1925W74 2011

  821'.914—dc22

  2010052589

  Printed in the United States of America

  DOC 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  for Janet and John Banville

  I dropped it, I dropped it,

  and on my way I dropped it

  I. SILVERED WATER

  ALBUM

  I am almost never there, in these

  old photographs: a hand

  or shoulder, out of focus; a figure

  in the background,

  stepping from the frame.

  I see myself, sometimes, in the restless

  blur of a child, that flinch

  in the eye, or the way

  sun leaks its gold into the print;

  or there, in that long white gash

  across the face of the glass

  on the wall behind. That

  smear of light

  the sign of me, leaving.

  Look closely

  at these snapshots, all this

  Kodacolor going to blue, and you'll

  start to notice. When you finally see me,

  you'll see me everywhere: floating

  over crocuses, sandcastles,

  fallen leaves, on those

  melting snowmen, their faces

  drawn in coal — among all

  the wedding guests,

  the dinner guests, the birthday-

  party guests — this smoke

  in the emulsion, the flaw.

  A ghost is there; the ghost gets up to go.

  SIGNS ON A WHITE FIELD

  The sun's hinge on the burnt horizon

  has woken the sealed lake,

  leaving a sleeve of sound. No wind,

  just curved plates of air

  re-shaping under the trap-ice,

  straining to give; the groans and rumbles

  like someone shifting heavy tables far below.

  I snick a stone over the long sprung deck

  to get the dobro's glassy note, the crying

  slide of a bottleneck, its

  tremulous ululation to the other shore.

  The rocks are ice-veined; the trees

  swagged with snow.

  Here and there, a sudden frost

  has caught some turbulence in the water

  and made it solid: frozen in its distress

  to a scar, or a skin-graft.

  Everywhere, frost-heave has jacked up boulders

  clear of the surface, and the ice-shove

  has piled great slabs on the lake-edge

  like luggage tumbled from a carousel.

  A racket of jackdaws, the serrated call

  of a falcon as I walk out onto the lake.

  A living lens of ice; you can hear it bending,

  breathing, re-adjusting its weight and light

  as the hidden tons of water

  swell and stretch underneath,

  thickening with cold.

  A low grumble, a lingering vibrato, creaks

  that seem to echo back and forth for hours;

  the lake is talking to itself. A loud

  twang in the ice. Twitterings

  in the railway lines

  from a train about to arrive.

  A pencilled-in silence,

  hollow and provisional.

  And then it comes.

  The detonating crack, like a dropped plank,

  as if the whole lake has snapped in two

  and the world will follow.

  But all that happens

  is a huge release of sound: a boom

  that rolls under the ice for miles,

  some fluked leviathan let loose

  from centuries of sleep, trying to push through,

  shaking the air like sheet metal,

  like a muffled giant drum.

  I hear the lake all night as a distant war.

  In the morning's brightness

  I brush the snow off with a glove,

  smooth down a porthole in the crust

  and find, somehow, the living green beneath.

  The green leaf looks back, and sees

  a man walking out in this shuddering light

  to the sound of air under the ice,

  out onto the lake, among sun-cups,

  snow penitents: a drowned man, waked

  in this weathering ground.

  BY CLACHAN BRIDGE

  For Alasdair Roberts

  I remember the girl

  with the hare-lip

  down by Clachan Bridge,

  cutting up fish

  to see how they worked;

  by morning's end her nails

  were black red, her hands

  all sequined silver.

  She unpuzzled rabbits

  to a rickle of bones;

  dipped into a dormouse

  for the pip of its heart.

  She'd open everything,

  that girl.

  They say they found

  wax dolls in her wall,

  poppets full of human hair,

  but I'd say they're wrong.

  What's true is

  that the blacksmith's son,

  th
e simpleton,

  came down here once

  and fathomed her.

  Claimed she licked him

  clean as a whistle.

  I remember the tiny stars

  of her hands around her belly

  as it grew and grew, and how

  after a year, nothing came.

  How she said it was still there,

  inside her, a stone-baby.

  And how I saw her wrists

  bangled with scars

  and those hands flittering

  at her throat,

  to the plectrum of bone

  she'd hung there.

  As to what happened

  to the blacksmith's boy,

  no one knows

  and I'll keep my tongue.

  Last thing I heard, the starlings

  had started

  to mimic her crying,

  and she'd found how to fly.

  TULIPS

  Sifting sand in the Starsign Hotel

  on 96th and Madison,

  trying not to hear the sirens: the heart's

  fist, desire's empty hand.

  The room awash with its terrible light;

  a sky unable to rain. Cradling a glass

  of nothing much at all, it's all

  come down to this: the electric fan's

  stop-start — the stalled, half-circle twist

  of draught over the bed; the sea-spill

  of sheets, the head in storm. Look

  at what's beached here on the night-stand:

  a flipped photograph and a silk scarf, a set

  of keys. These tulips, loosening in a vase.

  THE PLAGUE YEAR

  Great elms gesture in the last of the light. I am dying

  so slowly you'd hardly notice. What is there left

  to trust but this green world and its god,

  always returning to life? I stood

  all day in the vanishing point; my place

  now taken by a white-tailed deer.

  ***

  I go to check the children, who are done for.

  They lie there broken on their beds, limbs thrown out

  in the attitudes of death, the shape of soldiers.

  The next morning, I look up at my reflection

  in the train window: unshaven, with today's paper;

  behind me stands a gunman in a hood.

  ***

  The chestnut trees hold out their breaking buds

  like lanterns, or wounds, sticky with life. Under the

  false-teeth-whistling flight of a wood-pigeon

  a thrown wave of starlings rose and sank itself

  back into a hedge, in a burst of chatter.

  My father in the heart of the hedge, clasping a bible.

  ***

  Rain muscles its way through the gutters

  of Selma and Vine. I look north

  through the fog at the Hollywood sign,

  east to the observatory where tonight,

  under a lack of stars,

  old men will be fighting with knives.

  ***

  Western Michigan,

  on the Pere Marquette

  roll-casting for steelhead:

  mending my line over a drift of them

  stitched into the shadows,

  looking for a loophole in the water.

  ***

  Descending a wrought-iron spiral stair, peering

  down at the people very far below;

  no hand-rail, every

  second step rusted away, I'm holding

  a suitcase and a full glass of wine,

  wearing carpet slippers and a Balenciaga gown.

  ***

  My past stretches from here to there, and back,

  leaving me somewhere in the middle

  of Shepherd's Bush Green with the winos of '78.

  A great year; I remember it well. Hints of petrol,

  urine, plane trees; a finish so long you could

  sleep out under it. Same faces, different names.

  ***

  Parrots tear out their feathers, whistling Jingle Bells,

  cornfields burst into flames, rivers dry

  from their source to the sea, snakes sun themselves

  as the roads return to tar; puffer fish off the Lizard,

  whales in the Thames, the nets heavy

  with swordfish, yellowfin, basking shark.

  ***

  Cyclamen under olive trees; sacked tombs, a ruined

  moussaka, with chips. Locals on motorbikes

  chew pitta bread, stare out at me like sheep,

  their wayside shrines to the saints

  built better than their houses; at every bend

  tin memorials to the crashed dead.

  ***

  I was down here in the playground

  with the other adults,

  on the roundabouts and swings,

  while up on the hill

  on the tennis court,

  the children were kneeling to be shot.

  ***

  In November, two ring-necked parakeets

  eating from apples still hanging

  from the apple tree. The dead crow I notice

  is just a torn black bin-liner;

  at the end of the garden a sand-pit stands up

  as a fox, and slopes off.

  ***

  Smoked mackerel, smoked eel, smoked halibut,

  smoked reindeer heart, veal pâté, six different kinds

  of salmon, Gustav's Sausage, Jansson's Temptation.

  Tasting eachex voto,I saw the electrodes

  in a bucket, the blade, the gaff, the captive bolt,

  walking my plate around the stations of the dead.

  WONDERLAND

  She said her name was Alice,

  that she'd studied with the geisha

  in Japan, and was trained and able

  in the thousand ways of pleasuring a man.

  We'd share some shots of whisky

  — her favourite brand,Black Label—

  then she'd knock them back, and drink me

  under the table.

  THE TWEED

  Giving a back-rub

  to Hugh MacDiarmid

  I felt, through the tweed,

  so much tension

  in that determined

  neck, those little

  bony shoulders

  that, when it was released,

  he simply

  stood up and fell over.

  ABOUT TIME

  In the time it took to hold my breath

  and slip under the bathwater

  — to hear the blood-thud in the veins,

  for me to rise to the surface —

  my parents had died,

  the house had been sold and now

  was being demolished around me,

  wall by wall, with a ball and chain.

  I swim one length underwater,

  pulling myself up on the other side, gasping,

  to find my marriage over,

  my daughters grown and settled down,

  the skin loosening

  from my legs and arms

  and this heart going

  like there's no tomorrow.

  FALL FROM GRACE

  I cannot look into the clear faces

  of mirrors. The black glass of a window

  shines back at me its shame

  at all the times and all the places

  where I pitched my life in shadow,

  and couldn't look into the clear faces

  where blame now sits: replacing

  love and trust with nothing, no

  light shining back at me, just shame.

  My head's in flames. My mind races

  and I try to shut it down. Sometimes, though,

  I can't even look into the faces

  of flowers: all beauty carries traces

  of what I seeded, then buried in this snow

  that now shines back at me in sh
ame.

  My life a mix of dull disgraces

  and watery acclaim, my daughters know I

  cannot look into their clear faces;

  what shines back at me is shame.

  GOING TO GROUND

  That smell of over-cooked vegetables

  under the cupboard

  was a dead mouse; so small a body

  it would soon be gone, I said,

  dousing the boards with

  our daughter's cheap perfume.

  Later, you remembered

  where you'd smelt that smell before

  — that last sweetness, that old

  double-act of death and vanity —

  a hospital room

  where your Trinity friend

  was dying of AIDS,

  his toes and fingers

  starting to rot and go brown,

  how he'd sprayed the bed

  and his nails

  with eau de cologne.

  CAT, FAILING

  A figment, a thumbed

  maquette of a cat, some

  ditched plaything, something

  brought in from outside:

  his white fur stiff and grey,

  coming apart at the seams.

  I study the muzzle

  of perished rubber, one ear

  eaten away, his sour body

  lumped like a bean-bag

  leaking thinly

  into grim towel I sit

  and watch the light

  degrade in his eyes.

  He tries and fails

  to climb to his chair, shirks

  in one corner of the kitchen,

  cowed, denatured, ceasing to be

  anything like a cat,

  and there's a new look

  in those eyes

  that refuse to meet mine

  and it's the shame of being

  found out. Just that.

  And with that

  loss of face

  his face, I see,

  has turned human.

  A GIFT

  She came to me in a dress

  of true-love and blue rocket,

  with fairy-thimbles of foxglove

  at the neck and wrist,

  in her hair she wore a garland

  of cherry laurel, herb bennet,

  dwayberries and yew-berries,

  twined with stems of clematis,

  and at her throat she'd threaded

  twists of bryony stalk, seeds

  of meadow saffron and laburnum,

  linked simply in a necklace,

  and she was holding out

  a philtre of water lovage,

  red chamomile and ladies' seal

  in a cup, for me to drink.

 

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