The Map and the Clock
Page 46
forty of us, rigid with stage fright.
My whistle shrieked on a high note.
We harmonised on all the songs
but fell apart with the grand finale,
the well-rehearsed ‘O I know a wee spot …’
as the group split between London and Lovely.
COLETTE BRYCE
10th February: Queen
I keep the queen, she is long in my hand,
her legs slightly pliant;
folded, dropped down, wings flat
that flew her mating flight
to the sun and back, full of spermatozoa, dronesong.
She was made mechanically ecstatic.
I magnify what she is, magnify her skews and centres.
How downy she is, fur like a fox’s greyness, like a thistle’s mane.
Wings perfect, abdomen subtle in shades of brittle;
her rear legs are big in the lens;
feet like hung anchors are hooks for staying on cell-rims.
Veins in her wings are a rootwork of rivers,
all echo and interlace. This is her face, compound eye.
I look at the slope of her head, the mouth’s proboscis;
her thin tongue piercing is pink as cut flesh, flash glass.
Some hairs feather and split below the head.
Those eyes are like castanets, cast nets;
woman all feral and ironwork, I slip
under the framework, into the subtle.
The wing is jointed at the black leather shoulder.
I wear it, I am soft to stroke, the lower blade fans.
Third generation queen of our stock,
you fall as I turn. I hold your hunchback;
a carcase of lightness, no grief, part animal, part flower.
SEAN BORODALE
In Belfast
I
Here the seagulls stay in off the Lough all day.
Victoria Regina steering the ship of the City Hall
in this the first and last of her intense provinces,
a ballast of copper and gravitas.
The inhaling shop-fronts exhale the length
and breadth of Royal Avenue, pause,
inhale again. The city is making money
on a weather-mangled Tuesday.
While the house for the Transport Workers’ Union
fights the weight of the sky and manages
to stay up, under the Albert Bridge the river
is simmering at low tide and sheeted with silt.
II
I have returned after ten years to a corner
and tell myself it is as real to sleep here
as the twenty other corners I have slept in.
More real, even, with this history’s dent and fracture
splitting the atmosphere. And what I have been given
is a delicate unravelling of wishes
that leaves the future unspoken and the past
unencountered and unaccounted for.
This city weaves itself so intimately
it is hard to see, despite the tenacity of the river
and the iron sky; and in its downpour and its vapour I am
as much at home here as I will ever be.
SINÉAD MORRISSEY
Already someone’s set their dogs among the swans
The loch looks away, up at the crags
of Holyrood Park, as the landscape
turns witness to all that, one day,
I’d be surprised to think of as myself.
My tongue slumps in my mouth again,
a bastard feather. The moon, wearing
her off-the-shoulder number, slips
her bare shadows down to my feet –
my ghost preceding me, like a magnet.
The swans begin to nest, or, snorting water,
turn like hefty lanterns
gazing around themselves
as headlights of late traffic, brash crescendos,
rally for expiring destinations.
For nothing withstands this coolness
closing in, so constantly remote.
I’d live the night out
on the dark hymnal lake, to hear it talking
towards the edges of itself – that voice of the waters
so completely unbothered,
syllabic and out for the count.
RACHEL BOAST
Us
If you ask me, us takes in undulations –
each wave in the sea, all insides compressed –
as if, from one coast, you could reach out to
the next; and maybe it’s a Midlands thing
but when I was young, us equally meant me,
says the one, ‘Oi, you, tell us where yer from’;
and the way supporters share the one fate –
I, being one, am Liverpool no less –
cresting the Mexican wave of we or us,
a shore-like state, two places at once, God
knows what’s in it; and, at opposite ends
my heart’s sunk at separations of us.
When it comes to us, colour me unsure.
Something in me, or it, has failed the course.
I’d love to think I could stretch to it – us –
but the waves therein are too wide for words.
I hope you get, here, where I’m coming from.
I hope you’re with me on this – between love
and loss – where I’d give myself away, stranded
as if the universe is a matter of one stress.
Us. I hope, from here on, I can say it
and though far-fetched, it won’t be too far wrong.
ZAFFAR KUNIAL
ACKNOWLEDEGEMENTS
The publisher gratefully acknowledges permission to reprint copyright material in this book as follows:
ABSE, DANNIE: ‘Epithalamion’ from New & Collected Poems (Hutchinson 2003) © Dannie Abse 2003; ‘The Boasts of Hywel ab Owain Gwynedd’ © Dannie Abse; both poems reproduced by permission of the Estate through United Agents
ADCOCK, FLEUR: ‘Immigrant’ © Fleur Adcock reprinted by kind permission of Bloodaxe Books
AGARD, JOHN: ‘Listen, Mr Oxford Don’ © John Agard reprinted by kind permission of Bloodaxe Books from Alternative Anthem: Selected Poems, with Live DVD (Bloodaxe Books 2009)
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ALVI, MONIZA: ‘Presents from my Aunts in Pakistan’ © Moniza Alvi reprinted by kind permission of Bloodaxe Books from Split World: Poems 1990–2005 (Bloodaxe Books 2005)
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BORODALE, SEAN: ‘10th February: Queen’ © Sean Borodale reprinted by kind permission of Penguin Random House
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COPE, WENDY: ‘Shakespeare at School’ © Wendy Cope reproduced by permission of the artist through United Agents
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DAVIES, IDRIS: ‘The Bells of Rhymney’; ‘The Angry Summer’ from The Collected Poems of Idris Davies (ed. Islwyn Jenkins) (Gomer), reproduced by permission of Gomer Press and the Estate of Idris Davies
DE LA MARE, WALTER: ‘The Birthnight’; ‘No’, reproduced by permission of the Literary Trustees of Walter de la Mare and the Society of Authors
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DOOLEY, MAURA: ‘The Women of Mumbles Head’ © Maura Dooley reprinted by kind permission of Bloodaxe Books from Soundbarrier: Poems 1982–2002 Bloodaxe Books 2001)
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