Friday, 26 September 2014

from Blackwater Quartet, selection 15



English Studies

In the shore tree’s angles,
acid streaks of foliage
mirror bleached, unfurled sarongs of cirrus.


Where the sea grass fades into the headland, rails fuss,
and raucous plovers punctuate the weather’s syllabus.


At the point, a forgotten strategy,
a wartime bunker the tides undermine,
the hexagon of concrete shifted
into crazypaving slabs, the rubble of geometry
an isosceles entanglement of rusting steel
still waiting for the Nazis.


On the wall, the spray-paint scrawl: John Lennon lives.


Crake song evaporates,
in winds driving low along the coast,
in brushwood juniper and the scrub of gorse, in this memory
of the same land, for others, gone now,
in diesel haze and sprays of lilac
a strangeness,
courtly in the dusk.

A scratchy Sgt. Pepper plays thinly in the mews—
moonlight wedged against each pane, the room
folding and unfolding, and the barefoot bride
dancing in the flames.

Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Smalltown Boys


In the summer of 1968, my Mother put me on a train and sent me to Chapel Hill, North Carolina. 

There had been strain in our family following my Father's unexpected death in December the previous year, and as I was adrift somewhat both emotionally and mentally, I believe she thought that I would neglect my further education. 

Although it was inevitable in hindsight that I would attend the university local to our home, she and one of my teachers, Reva Chrisman, with whom I had developed an affinity through poetry and creative writing, agreed that a trip to the University of North Carolina might provide an incentive for me to become more involved in my own life once more, which is another way of saying, conversely, that I had become too self-absorbed.

Of the journey itself, all I recall is that it was a "sleeper" train, and that I was awoken the next morning by the noise of the station and a smartly-uniformed black conductor. Other images came back to me years later and were used in the opening lines of an unrelated poem.


Others waved goodbye.

Slow-motion, shoeshine station
a freeze frame of the '40s,
I doze in the sidings - dog-latin phantom
riding high to Dixie.


The sole purpose of my journey was to imbibe the atmosphere of the university attended by American novelist Thomas Wolfe. His first novel, Look Homeward, Angel, thinly disguised local residents of his hometown of nearby Asheville, with the result that when the novel was published the resulting uproar required him to prudently remain absent from the town for the next eight years. 

In his short life - he died just before his thirty-eighth birthday - he wrote four mammoth novels, and in the process redefined American fiction. The Web and the Rock, You Can't Go Home Again, and my personal favourite, Of Time and the River, provided autobiographical insights into my own life and writing at the time.

The visit was a failure. I think I met briefly with someone from Admissions, but nothing came of it. My overriding impression, at the fine old age of seventeen, was that the place was somehow fixed in time, rigid with Wolfe's memory, and without vitality. I found a local bar frequented by students (I think the legal age to consume alcohol must have been eighteen in North Carolina, and, well, I was 'near enough'.), and spent the rest of the day there, drinking bottles of German lager.

I can't recall reading any of Wolfe's work since my first experiences of them between the ages of sixteen and eighteen, but their "atmosphere" remains with me even now. There is, as might be expected, an academic industry around the works, treatises and tomes in support of tenured posts, orbiting around the dark star of Chapel Hill.






Saturday, 13 September 2014

from Blackwater Quartet, selection 14


Airs, Waters, Places


A ribbon mist off Garda, and thunder
guttering in the Dolomites, across
the lido path a snow of jasmine— toss-turn
weather, the stain of stars we’re under,
confirms the spare conformity of loss.
 

The reds of red façades recall the lake
republic long since sunk past Salò’s port,
sideshow of the Romanesque, last resort
of Mussolini and the higher stake—
steamer routes, each hotel a former fort.


A reedy baffle gates the cut stone quay
against the backwash of the hydrofoils.
‘A week of fish in aromatic oils,
a little wine…’ wrote Pound in 1920,
inviting Joyce: belle-lettres, snug gargoyles.


Heat. Antique towns, screwed down by 30C,
retreat behind a pastel semaphore
of shutters and the weight of pines, restore
a rumour of Catullus to the scree
of broken capitals above the shore.


Under cypress spears, a part-worked torso
rises from a cube of local stone, no
seamless white carrara sculpted verso
to the clouds and water, each mallet blow
a kind of breath, instead, this cold echo.


San Paulo’s shade, a twisting tracery
of bay and bougainvillea, gives way
to blue enamels. Mary floats, a sway
of gold leaf shoaling the baptistery,
apostles fading from the fresco clay.

… sopravvivere alla perdita
della reputazione… to outlive
the loss of one’s reputation— votive,
mantis profile of the hydrofoil “Goethe”
past the terraces of stunted olive…


the driftwood cavities of failing bronze
that replicate these ghosts in time, and screen
the deck chair litter on the mezzanine.
Beyond the bright piazza, doily swans,
their careless whites, engage electric green.

Thursday, 11 September 2014

Cycling after Thomas and the English (Review)


My review of David Caddy's Cycling after Thomas and the English, is now available at the new Kudzu House book review site, Kudzu Vine.

 http://blog.kudzuhouse.org/