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The Reed Bed

Page 3

by Dermot Healy


  and the first words

  issued from

  the throat-singers.

  A Sober Night with Stars

  A sober night

  with stars,

  one swift clean bell.

  The copy

  send to heaven;

  the original

  leave in hell.

  Plants, Heavy with Berry

  Plants, heavy with berry,

  in a frost. Not far off,

  a house.

  A voice, a reason.

  A kitchen. Exhausted by choice,

  I lie awake

  and rise worrying

  the same tune,

  sit looking for an opening,

  then empty-headed

  while away the time

  with cards

  or crosswords,

  looking up and around me

  as people will

  who search for words

  and feel ridiculed

  by what they do,

  beside the muffled Atlantic

  or in some city

  in mid-afternoon,

  looking up and around

  as if someone were

  watching them,

  these malingerers,

  afraid of the what-not, then

  conscience-stricken

  I come to my feet.

  Time to go shopping, man, weed

  the blasted garden.

  Manure the drills,

  do your shoes, clear

  the walls of lichen.

  Not far off, a house.

  A voice, a reason.

  A kitchen.

  The Strange Impasse

  So many things happen

  while you are looking the other way,

  it’s better that you don’t know,

  can’t know; leave it,

  forget it, it’s not your business,

  and of course you get angry over nothing,

  then give over. Read without taking in the words,

  nod at what you don’t hear,

  turn aside and have another beer,

  could you say that again, sir?

  Again, please, I was elsewhere.

  Or maybe it’s the news and you’re

  looking straight at what is not happening,

  because it will be repeated again

  ad infinitum. On the Six or the Seven

  another dumb outcry not your own.

  Could I have that again, sir?

  Daydreaming, when someone is telling you

  exactly what they’ve seen or done;

  you’re travelling the world in first class,

  decrying, in an awkward silence,

  that human engineering should lead

  to this strange impasse.

  The Whispering Shells

  for Inor

  1

  The tide mark

  in March

  is not seaweed

  or shale

  but a breathless

  line of shells

  filled again

  with voices

  wandering the ward

  at nightfall.

  2

  The sea they hear

  is a field of insects

  shunted through

  all the senses.

  The boat they’re on

  sails through

  my mind, and my mind

  founders

  out there

  on the hush.

  3

  The lost

  are looking

  for a break

  in the weather

  as they bale. They pray

  to get better

  at landfall,

  tomorrow, the day after,

  dear God, when

  they might look

  with wonder

  on sanity again.

  4

  The oarsmen

  are rowing

  towards deliverance

  from despair

  as they paddle the deep

  waters of the unnamed,

  they sight land

  that is not land

  but a heave of water that slowly banks high

  into cloud and falls down there again.

  5

  Each man in his cot

  calls out

  to his fellows —

  and back

  come their

  awesome replies:

  I am out here forever.

  There is none

  to deliver me. And is there nowhere

  after this?

  6

  They search

  the empty ocean.

  They enter

  the cuckoo storm.

  The boat is

  filled with blue salt,

  the music board

  shattered.

  Sometimes it is too late

  to be saved.

  7

  And then to draw closer

  through the slough

  of teeming sandflies,

  to dock at last

  at this strange

  drunken coast

  where the first thing

  each man heard

  was his own

  whispering shell.

  Walls

  There was a time

  I used marvel over

  a green bottle or claypipes

  set oddly into a stone wall.

  Now that I’ve started

  building them

  I put everything in,

  chains, plastic, shells.

  I put in all

  I can carry,

  wheelbarrows of scraws and more,

  if I can find it,

  and sometimes

  I panic in the windy

  open spaces,

  and often rest

  where there

  was nothing before,

  and think, well,

  the wall under me may lack

  the Donlon touch,

  the finish of mason and fiddlemaker,

  saddler, farmer.

  A poor type of man

  I am to follow them

  who built battery walls

  and turned the earth

  around to face

  the north-west.

  So be it.

  I look back,

  pleased with myself,

  as if I’d just climbed

  Everest

  and was waiting for

  the others to arrive.

  The Wall I Built

  The wall I built

  the sea took.

  The stones I gathered

  the sea scattered.

  Falling asleep I look

  left, right,

  because, you see,

  they don’t make

  tomorrow like

  they used to.

  The Sky Road

  for Dallan

  A summer’s night

  we returned unseeing through fog

  to the house

  to find the mist had stopped

  just at the front wall

  and, turning back,

  we found a glacier,

  a long grave white floor

  that you would be tempted to walk on,

  reaching for miles,

  to the prow of the mountain.

  On all sides

  down hung.

  We might have been in a cave

  where old dingoes

  had ghosted to a standstill

  and were trapped

  in a frozen drop of hail.

  To the left the sea had been swept into a corner.

  The grey heads of trees stirred in shrouds.

  A roof of a house shedding dew

  floated by. And beyond that

  an orange light that once marked something

  marked nothing at all.

  We were alone up there,

  above cloud level.

  Who slept underneath that bank of mistr />
  did not exist. All landmarks were gone.

  We were alone up there on Dooneel,

  all sound off

  except for the low cough of a cow out there in the stillness.

  In front of me the shadow of my son

  grows the length of me

  and goes beyond me,

  beyond our absences and our tempers

  down this long white sky road,

  this strange sea-bed,

  blanketed in fog. No one. Not a stir.

  The world down to a whisper.

  What Happened at Noon?

  What happened

  was

  all the cats

  took off their caps

  and looked out to sea,

  the hares quit

  the rocks,

  the waves stopped,

  and birdsong

  suddenly ended.

  Then the light

  left me.

  A Breeze

  I step back from the crossword

  and turn to see

  the leaves of the dictionary

  flap in the breeze

  outside on the plastic table

  in the gravel yard,

  then as the winds increase

  the large atlas starts unfolding,

  till all the planets

  and countries and words

  and their meanings

  are flying by

  as if the books

  were being flicked through

  by some demented reader

  who has lost his place

  in the world:

  shaman, shiite, shogun,

  Mars, adverse, idiom,

  to rebuff, to slander,

  a fall of hail, vacant, volatile,

  Saturn, Sierra Leone,

  Azores, otic, wrack, Chad,

  China, Cyprus, Rome;

  the pages speed by like frames

  in those early movies

  till it all makes

  some kind of story,

  a new migration has begun,

  the Sahara is crossed,

  an oasis named,

  the way we came forgot,

  the wanderers leave

  Gabon for Ghana

  and at Jerusalem part

  in various languages

  to search for meaning again.

  Sessa: an exclamation mark.

  Jupiter. Limitrophe: on the border.

  Hay: a dance. Hush: a rush of water.

  Then the wind eases,

  the mad search for whatever it was

  stops. The breeze has reached

  sermocination in Beijing.

  The Cat

  The cat who has lost her voice

  is the cat that calls out loudest.

  So it is when the muse goes

  into the terrible silence.

  Larkin’s Room in a Storm

  In the storms I imagine city rooms

  where everything is laid out to the touch,

  a seat by the window,

  binoculars, wine glasses, so much

  jazz. Everything in its place

  like the first hand of a game of cards.

  Outside, a breeze blows through the tombs

  of the dead who died in Wandsworth.

  A stranger looks into my face.

  Wild cats flit through breakers’ yards.

  No one is hurrying. The single men are home.

  And women stand with cup of tea in hand

  watching Coronation Street in Camden.

  In some square a computer comes on.

  The fifth chapter of a novel is ending.

  The Kirk family is spending

  Easter on Mars.

  I am on the top deck of a bus

  that’s turning through slush

  down the King’s Road in Chelsea.

  In the manager’s office of Pellet and Son

  I’m the security man reading Dostoevsky.

  It’s after 12. It’s Christmas Eve.

  There’s a taxi queue in Clapham.

  By the old King’s Head someone shouts,

  ‘Let me go, just let me fucking at him!’

  The rain has stopped. It turns to snow.

  We travel on drugs through Pimlico.

  A Henry Moore sits by the Thames

  but acid does not go art.

  Instead we marvel at the shining plinth

  and coming back I fall apart

  and there I do it again

  throwing myself into the traffic

  on Vauxhall Bridge

  and wake up in Wicklow

  in a shed of flea-bitten hounds.

  I stand by the sea with the mange.

  Everything I look on for years

  is permanently strange.

  I find myself at a table

  eating bacon in Ward’s

  Irish House. Once again on a bus,

  or a tube, or a street, going

  past rampant TVs, booklined walls,

  Italian shops, Italian stalls,

  The Queen’s merc stalls in the dark,

  the ducks are leaving James’s Park,

  I’m woken by reggae

  in Caldwell Street,

  it all comes back,

  the arguments, the loss,

  then suddenly here I am

  in a room by the sea

  in blinding sleet

  away from all the harm.

  And yet I’d like to aspire

  to a centrally-heated library,

  like Larkin, in rooms where fires

  come on at a touch

  rather than flailing in the dark

  through a stack of turf,

  and like him at his best

  be thinking of death

  after another night of sordidness.

  Alone. Vexed.

  Better to be abrasive in Hull

  than go shouting ‘Go fuck yourself!’

  to no one in particular

  on a windy peninsula.

  One Minute with Eileen

  1

  After finishing work

  I take a shortcut through Soho

  and pass an open door

  that says: two pounds

  for one minute with Eileen.

  Well, I ponder this,

  then turn and turn about.

  The old lady behind the counter

  gives me a blue ticket.

  Sit there, she says, Eileen

  is occupied at present.

  I’ll wait on the street, I say.

  2

  So I took a turn or two

  through the Chinese,

  like a man about

  business in the town,

  and soon enough, a youth

  doused in gel emerges

  head-down

  like a duck in thunder

  and high-tailed it

  in a north-easterly,

  and the lady waved me in.

  The inside door opened and

  I sit in an armchair

  facing Eileen.

  3

  Now, she explains,

  I’m a tipsy girl.

  If you want to touch me,

  that’s twenty; if you want me

  to touch you, that’s forty.

  Full sex is sixty.

  Anything after that

  is over a hundred.

  And what, I asked,

  do I get for my two pound?

  You get to hear the prices, she said.

  Wonderers

  I find myself looking

  across at your face

  wondering

  for the umpteenth time,

  who you are,

  where you came from,

  and then, as always,

  begin wondering

  who this is,

  who is this

  that wonders who you are?

  And from your face

  I can see that for a moment

  you too have forg
otten who I am.

  How strange

  I must be to you

  who thinks he knows

  you best of all,

  how strange you are to yourself,

  how strange we all are

  to ourselves and others;

  like those folk you see in photos

  waiting at train stations

 

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