Sunday, January 19, 2014

The lie-fire

Words bristled
in the starting gates and shook their necks.

I had said I wasn’t married and he’d
What are you waiting for? shot back
quick as the white flash of thought.
Marriage, is it not true, is a blessing
from God?

My eyes dragged themselves from his leathered feet
as he sat cross legged on the floor,
worked up his bare arm,
his neck,
around and past his ear
to tie themselves alongside his.

Dark and flecked with white, his eyes sang a belly full of faith,
but it was what came striding out of them
that beat me back and held me.
Here, at a lope, came the men
we’d passed on the road to Lusaka,
picked up for a moment in the headlights
then dropped back into the night.

Men with briefcases,
backpacks, faggots on their backs, men with pickaxes,
bare feet, flip flops, men with boots;
men with hours to walk before the next fixed light
could remind them home was closer than the moon.
Some flowed down behind us on the road
but some I saw turn off and walk out
past the miombo trees into the bush
to set their rough footsteps sweeping a dust rhythm
with the noises of the night.

I thought of all these men, and looked
at him, and looked down again at my contempt
lamed and whinnying upon the floor,
and lied. And months later, sitting down
to write a poem about distances,
it took until this line to see the ancient fire I’d set
between us, to see him gone
into a darkness of my making
and the ground blackened and cut short
where once we’d stopped to piss,

our twin arcs alive and dancing in the sun.

Words and I

Adjectives are us, getting personal,
gaffs to hook the fin-dark, darting glint of things
and haul it on deck flipping, or dead.

Adjectives are where we take our eyes, our tingling skin,
our cores, fuck-hungry and mean, and turn them on nouns.
Make no mistake that adjectives are desperate things.

Take Homer, the maker of our word.
His Achaeans, from the first book to the last,
are euknemides, well-greaved, thirty one times in all.

Their greaves hold fast in their full bellowed strength,
fixed firm when the men are lounging round the camp,
and their greaves stay shining on when their mouths taste dirt

and Trojan chariots roll over and snap their shins.
Even as some whirling hero plucks their bodies clean,
these Greeks’ greaves are well.

Perhaps someone took comfort to hear it so.
Perhaps, when I stop writing to see in the window
this stone dead city, and think How oppressive it can be!

as the bright blue gushing sounds of countryside come running,
I too should pause, and rethink the relationship between
these adjectives and me, untie them, let them wander

off to a void of air, or fling them like confetti in the wind
to settle with what nouns they please.

Domestic

The sign read “semi-feral”, which he explained
was because one day in their unstable youth,
all swollen knees and juddering legs,
they were driven into what he called a crush
(a wooden ring the foals would circle wild
with fear until they found their mare),
where they were vaccinated, branded, and had their tails
docked, before being left to roam
amid the fading purple of an autumn heath.
All this – a puncture, a scar, a military cut -
meant the ponies running either side of us
as you pulled back on me in fear
were half way to being right. Half way
from being ferae (beasts and wild things) but as far
from the domus (the house, or home) where
life awakes its better breeding. In just such a home
you lie in bed beside me as I watch the news –
your head on my armpit as you half see
more celebrities and paedophiles penned in
another crush, heads lowly like a grazing foal,
watching their feet walk them out of another house,
their membership revoked. And I watch you
dozing, and hope beyond what all I know
that this thin legged little house of ours may last.
And then I too am taken into sleep, that unruly
skating skim of thought, where my hair grows long
and my skin uncleansed, and when I wake

I wake afraid that all my loving you won’t help.