Peace Talks

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Peace Talks Page 2

by Andrew Motion


  Their tent was empty.

  After searching it for proof

  of what they had meant to do,

  I stepped back into the gale

  and continued my search

  for another three or four hours,

  repeatedly shouting their names

  as loudly as possible across the wilderness.

  Eventually I went back to the tent again

  and dragged outside their sleeping bags

  to make an X in the snow.

  *

  After two more days

  and no further evidence

  I began my own descent,

  clambering through treacherous iceberg scenery at first,

  then discovering a good moraine track

  that led me down into valleys filled with flowers

  and so to our Base Camp.

  In my final estimation

  the mountain looked very beautiful,

  and I decided my friends

  must have been enchanted in the same way.

  It was the beginning of their mystery

  and no mystery at all.

  I can think of no better way to explain

  why they chose to stay.

  The Concern: Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth

  One has tramped forty miles, but at the sight

  below him vaults the gate into standing wheat

  and, with the hard heads rasping against him,

  bounds forward taking for once a straight line

  rather than musing roundabout, while the other

  stops digging the vegetable rows in his garden

  to watch this face which will persist in vanishing

  then rising in the sea of green becoming gold.

  *

  This face is the face of an angel already falling,

  the mouth open, voluptuous, gross, eloquent;

  the chin good-humoured and round; the nose,

  the rudder, small, feeble, nothing. But dramatic.

  The other is gaunt, internal, plain, solemn, lyrical,

  not yet stony from effort of suffering, although

  thrust beyond the pale of love already, his likings

  running along new channels, the old ones dry.

  *

  Old things have passed away, and new violence –

  the rage and dog-day heat – that has died out too.

  One says at the fireside: I am no longer for public life;

  I have snapped my squeaking baby-trumpet of sedition.

  Meanwhile the other, woken by this strange tenderness,

  breaks the silence in himself. He thinks it is possible

  now to describe the attraction of a country in romance,

  and reasonable to live like a green leaf on the blessed tree.

  *

  Briefly to all intents and purposes they are one man

  joined to the other – they have become one another –

  Mr Colesworth or Wordridge, the Concern, settling

  here at the hard roadside in the guise of a vagrant,

  or there unfolding into an albatross and skimming

  over the shining masts and slavers of Bristol docks

  as if they were both one sailor who fell overboard;

  a lost soul labouring north towards the ice and sun.

  *

  Then they find and make their chosen resort a fold

  where a stream falls down a sloping wall of rock

  to form a waterfall considerable for this country,

  and across the pool: an ash tree, with its branches

  spindling up in search of light. For want of that

  the shaking leaves have faded almost lily-white,

  while downwards from the trunk hang ivy-trails

  a-sway to prove the breathing of the waterfall.

  *

  This is a fine place to talk treason, if not a place

  to forget there is any need for treason. And yet,

  sequestered as it might be in wild Poesy, the mind

  still becomes illegible to itself for no good reason.

  And yet, external things will lose the sense of having

  their external life, and men that cannot fly will grow

  and stretch their wings in the abyss of their ideals,

  and grieve that all they have is just the feel of flight.

  *

  One says nothing. The other says: two giants leagued

  together, their names are called bread & cheese.

  The other says nothing. One says: my past life seems

  to me like a dream, a feverish dream! all one gloomy

  huddle of strange actions and dim-coloured motives!

  The other says nothing. One says: it is a painful idea

  that our existence is of very little use; I have left

  my friends, I have left plenty. The other says nothing.

  Before the Court

  at the Foundling Hospital

  We fall

  and everyone

  we fall

  what makes you

  with your flowing plaster and

  your swag your little

  eyelet pictures and

  the boys here in the hospital

  the marbles and

  forbid them not

  we fall we fall and look

  green rushes O green rushes

  where the current brought him

  where

  no matter I

  I am a woman of good character.

  Two Late Portraits

  1 Audrey Wills

  I was a Brixham girl

  and Dad’s boat was

  the pride of the fleet

  every day

  when they came ashore

  I had my pick of the mackerel

  beautiful

  shiny blue suits

  then again

  I was stationed on the flying boats

  that was a lovely time

  they came in very low over the water

  or seemed to

  ask yourself

  what will you remember

  in Llandudno on honeymoon

  singing at night can you hear me

  singing and

  I painted my toenails red

  I still do this

  by myself

  that’s me there

  dancing round and round the house

  without a single brown penny in my purse

  you see what I am saying

  I am living

  every colour except grey

  and you would not believe

  I have

  looked after everyone O

  but I have

  when I go to the doctor now

  I find the door closed

  do I knock what

  do I do

  I sing

  come in I am Richard I landed

  on Gold Beach I am Peter

  I was married to Steve for fifty-seven years

  I am Helen aged seventy-two

  and I do tatting

  I am Ali a widow I am Ron

  and I enjoy boiled potatoes

  and a drop of broth

  I am not a lover of sweet things

  as for me I am Audrey Audrey open

  the window

  and let me hear the seagulls

  let me hear the seagulls flying across

  as for me I love God and I want to die

  what better thing is there to live for

  2 Sheila Smith

  Is there anybody there O

  Nobby our Suffolk what

  Suffolk Punch poor Nobby he

  trod on a wasps’ nest

  but it’s bone it’s only bone

  we led him

  to and fro in the harvest time

  Michael and me

  first field then barn

  in harvest time my brother and me

  and next what’s red bright red

  the tractor yes poor Nobby


  well

  I saw Aunt Mary cut him up

  she cut him up

  she sliced him in her kitchen with the flags

  and blood

  blood ran over her elbows

  all in the High Street Number 11

  here it is now see Nobby

  his painless foot my horse

  champed in the silence champed

  the forest’s ferny floor

  no it’s my father O

  here’s my father walking down the stairs

  don’t fall

  don’t miss your step you

  don’t forget

  the silence surging softly

  Michael in his arms but limp

  then out

  and so

  I step aside aged twelve I do

  I stand aside and let them pass

  I watch my brother carried to the car

  I do

  is anyone is anyone is there

  the Traveller said

  The Realms of Gold

  In a quiet part of Leamington Spa

  in the same flat

  where he has lived all his life,

  sixty-two-year-old Michael Standage

  is close to completing his biography

  of the poet D. J. Enright.

  Nobody reads Enright now

  apart from a few surviving friends

  and a handful of fans

  who insist he is under-rated.

  Standage does not speak to them.

  He is nervous of an interpretation

  that differs from his own,

  and they are jealous of him;

  it’s not as though his book

  is authorised or anything;

  he just got there first

  and found that archive in Japan.

  All the same Standage

  is confident of a clear run home.

  He works late each night

  and only pauses

  to watch a black wind

  stirring the trees that line his side street

  but stop

  where it meets the main road.

  *

  Meanwhile the poems of D. J. Enright

  gather dust in second-hand bookshops

  or fly into a skip

  along with other unwanted things

  that go when a life ends.

  A long history of adventure and homecoming.

  A fastidious editor yet free

  to travel in the realms of gold.

  A highly original mind

  with Proust among others

  virtually off by heart.

  And speaking of the heart …

  But to date only Standage can do that

  with any confidence.

  The rest of us, the few

  of us,

  open the dark green Collected and think:

  this was a life as good as any;

  who am I to let it vanish completely

  without returning an echo.

  When I read him and I listen

  to the silence following,

  I know

  exactly what he means.

  *

  Standage makes an exception to his rule

  and accepts my invitation to meet.

  We decide on Brighton,

  which is neutral ground,

  and walk for an hour on the shingle.

  Following publication

  can we look forward

  to a revival of Enright’s fortunes?

  We both sincerely hope so

  and, while the dry grey stones

  grind under our shoes,

  extol the virtues for which we feel

  a common admiration,

  especially as they appear

  in Paradise Illustrated

  and The Terrible Shears.

  Once we have reached our climax

  we stand still

  and stare out to sea.

  Small waves beat towards us,

  fold over neatly, and turn into foam.

  Very soon more follow and

  the same thing happens.

  Three Witnesses

  1 The Wilderness

  What does a man see

  in the wilderness

  if not a reed

  shaken by the wind.

  Since I arrived here

  I have admired thousands

  for the music they produce

  astringent in summer

  in winter fuller

  and more nearly sweet

  thanks to the green moisture in the leaf.

  As for human visitors

  there has only been

  this stranger

  who

  if he spoke at all

  argued with his shadow.

  So far as I can tell

  nothing changed when he went.

  I still bathe in the streams

  poured out by the desert lark.

  I still read the news I need

  in the footprints of lizards

  and the looping hieroglyphics

  snakes leave with their skin.

  2 Lazarus

  I slipped over the border.

  I fell down

  in the pure dark

  with no dreaming.

  Then I came home again.

  Wherever I go now

  to market in the village

  or working the fields at harvest

  I prefer to imagine

  I leave footprints of swirling light.

  In truth

  there is nothing so obvious

  to show I am unlike

  the man I was before.

  And yet

  to speak in confidence

  I am almost worn through

  by the terms of my existence.

  They require me

  to raise my voice

  every single day

  and declare that I am happy.

  3 The Upper Room

  My task is to clear the room

  when the guests go home at night.

  To straighten the benches

  to sweep up the breadcrumbs

  fish skeletons

  and pepper stalks

  to separate the olives from the olive stones

  and

  to wipe away the stain

  if any wine has spilt

  between the pitcher

  and the cups.

  A Fight in Poland

  Beyond the outskirts of Gdańsk

  where the docklands and factories expire

  in a shimmering wasteland

  of foul-smelling marshes and black creeks,

  and the Baltic Sea chews over its sorrows

  never attempting to resolve them,

  I came to a hotel as big as a palace.

  The lobby

  was like the interior of a gun-case,

  darkened with red velvet that a clever workman

  had pressed over mouldings and cornices;

  my room

  when I reached it along freezing corridors

  where the timber groaned beneath me,

  was simple as a hermit’s cell,

  with a view across sand dunes

  to the dark brown Baltic shoreline.

  I was saturated.

  I had no change of clothes.

  But the shower worked after a fashion,

  and an hour later I presented myself in the restaurant

  where waiters slid very smoothly between the empty tables,

  but still managed to rattle the cutlery,

  and shake a faint musical accompaniment

  from the throats of wine glasses.

  I had eel.

  Six inches of shining green eel

  and a bottle of white rioja.

  Enough to send me upstairs in due course

  thinking I had drunk the electric Baltic,

  which I saw from the window on the stairway

  was still fizzing under a fierce barrage of rain.


  After an hour’s sleep or strong hallucination

  I was woken by the sound of two men

  fighting in the adjacent room.

  Heavy, muscular men

  pounding each other with their fists,

  and afterwards heaving together on a bed

  before finishing with that

  and throwing down on the bare floor

  a wardrobe,

  a mirror,

  several books,

  then one glass followed by another glass.

  I grew used to the disturbance.

  So completely used to it, in fact,

  I did not even turn a hair

  when the door from their room into mine

  bulged on its golden hinges,

  and debated whether to break open.

  For this reason I said nothing next morning

  as I took my place in the dining room

  now flooded with cold white light

  streaming in off the Baltic.

  And nothing again

  as the waiter poured out my coffee

  and the hotel slipped her moorings.

  We set forth over waves

  heading due North,

  and I still remained seated at my table;

  I expected my neighbours from the night before

  would appear at any minute

 

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