Thursday, 23 July 2015

from Blackwater Quartet, selection 36



Captain Blood Returns

Exile is its own season, reasons raining
invisibly for the traveler:
gentle and true, a sad song’s pining.

Joined in remembering his love to you,
rivers and the wind author caves from the rock,
the patterns of earth and images of heaven
determining the movement of energy through time.

With the strength read in tortoise shells,
leaves, and shapes of air,
the dwellings open into green bamboo,
into cane and the tall reed.

Such lodestars render worlds familiar,
as though light were a fever forever breaking,
and the slow wick these paragraphs allow
were time enough for moons and shadows quartering.

But the sun’s wheels are spoked with days,
and fields of force around the poles
make hostages of sea and continent alike—
the moon-tug of tides manifest in the pulse,
a theorem of salt walking upright on the land.
But observe, you are put to stern choice, to save
in making slave of the creature, or a man of him.

The dust of the road marking limits of his journey,
consider him human, confessed of new scenarios
between the edge of metal and the smooth jade,
or have the stones of Venice more in common with the clouds
than with the sea’s lit foam,
the plasma of ancient stars, or unfamiliar moons
ajar in other doorways?

There were summer evenings then, late evening sunlight
as supple as a boa round a bough.
Motionless at the window bay, a figure in white
stared beyond the empty street,
raising her attention, her watching’s ghost,
slowly and at last to the man across the way,
tending flowers in the early dark,
the singing and the soil beneath the nail:
root labours, as simple as a burning book
or the warm, clear nights
with moonlight and the lovers walking, naming stars
with names that made the night familiar—
the sky pieced over, within and through—
a sudden genealogy of light and shadow,
a leaf-like insistence
larger now than thunder in the wind.

As allegories and the world occasion
(dead stars devouring the definition of the day),
for an idiot of God the times grew fierce and fatal,
and summer snagged like a broken kite
in the bare reaches of November’s trees,
until he could neither go nor stay,
finding advantage neither in living
nor in death, and so departed
naked and starving along the way in winter,
courting cross-roads to find a remedy for love.

Approach is everything,
perceived in fire and the withered tree,
an inferred complicity of signs,
as lives gathered to their fathers
vie mutually with a sky
gathering to an early snow.

Mistake a sea tale
for the blue of any taller story,
and the world assumes an orbit more peculiar,
an aspect more particular
than idioms the observer had intended;
or after undue stress upon the direful
will the world come round to meet him after all?

So much for allegories…
commanding neither loyalty nor love
beyond the subterfuge of pi approximations,
as courage, resource, and invention
demand strokes bolder than liege codes
or handshakes with a mirror.

At Port Royal, between the here and hereafter,
a matter of tenses come and gone,
the fort otherwise to starboard,
while astern and larboard rode, unbroken,
mast lines of the Jamaica squadron,
the privateer lounged on sailcloth and cane,
a quarter-deck improvisation
meant neither for sudden death nor siege
nor any stallion-mare antithesis,
but for fate that is windward with the islands:
to reach up, and with a bell rope
pull down the sky
from the Tortugas to Haiti in the south,
dreaming a dream of guests and prisoners,
a calf-bound copy of Horace’s Odes
neglected in his hands.

When story lines have burned away
and time no longer canyons through the palm,
and by the energy the hand was image of,
we return to sources,
the dark earth flared green with shoots
and ruined orchards exploding in the spring,
we remember the idea of ourselves as motion,
a dream song floating through the haze,
abiding in a question, in a run of luck
or the faith we inhabit, outnumbered,
a way of saying where the weather went to,
where the star swallowing itself whole
went to, as a falcon lifts from a king’s hand:
a jewel at the king’s wrist
like a late entry in the book of hours,
rising to single-out the sky.

Ideas abide, the patterns expressly human:
verb enough to live by,
a fossil fisting into diamonds,
and though the axis of the planet angles as it must,
and galaxies existing only in equations
red-shift into an infinite interrogative,
the lute work of compasses at magnetic north
presents itself as a warm familiar, a nickname
for worlds referred to as our own.

Let the physician heal himself,
and with that laying-on of hands
mellow into medicine as sweet as orris root,
else dream, and have done with plagues
and parliaments, and the crush of sea miles
like cutlass strokes across the bow.
When whores of the old dominion
would sing High Mass for less, taken for a song,
content to describe what phenomena should elicit,
what fee, then, for the physician who heals his own?

In the power of his hand,
the power of warships swung starboard to starboard
within range of grapnels, within a gauze of burning sail
the Arabella listing, stern to bow now balsa for the guns,
Blood’s men boarding the ship of France
as patterns of climax alone allow,
from the deck of the captured vessel
watching his own ship rock and settle,
masts released to water, his own face
anonymous with wounds, and the weeping
as nameless as his own:
he breathes mirrors… the woman at the oriel
burning slowly into view, as a cycle
of winter and wandering burns towards equinox
and heals him home.

In lattices of degree,
distance supplants a king’s commission,
the buccaneer equal to three soldiers of the line,
prevails or perishes combating the aphasia
common to those latitudes.

He speaks his reasons clearly now, neither lost between
the letter and the meaning of places pure and unpeopled,
nor as a reality reduced to forms,
rather, of the world of myth as a turning construct,
a transformation syntax in the literature of recovery.

A sane man and searching, drifting back
from places he remembers he will never know,
consider him human, as plausible as rain
and what he has survived to be: unknown,
and remembering for himself alone the banyan life
whose tallest branch tip is root as well.

For though it was cold, and cold
to the ends of patience, the world
singing from its own soil
mends.

Counting Down

You put away your dreams, like the Christmas pine composted to meet some new local government recycling target; no one reads you now.

Time for regret, time for change, or to regret the changes you never made, or changes made around you, close enough to touch, to feel the cold breath of them against your face. 

The sound of distant bells penetrate even these thick walls.

The world rotates, a little on its side, knocked off its true path eons back - some passing piece of moon, some wayward son come home unexpectedly. And dreams themselves adjusting to the odd angles of orbit. Dreams and planets rattling round, little stones, rattling round. Who can know the black dream from black stones?

Imagine speaking, imagine each leaf of the tree at the window embossed with your name, little veins of letters scrawled point to petiole. Imagine a cold wind and the leaves falling.

You are tubes and orifices, pressurised, suspended on a frame, all else is dreamy ego lust slavering gold grabbing killer flick-knife work.

Write your name a hundred times. By the end of the exercise, you won't recognise yourself, but perversely you will convince yourself new beginnings are still possible.  

Here is a dream, a place for dreams, a dream that wandered off and lost itself down a country road. 

When you looked into her eyes nobody had to explain to you what dreams coming true might mean.

The sun is coming up. It's fiery and far away, but its radiation lights up your puny pressures, goes right through you, burning up dreams and skin and the way home.

 

Saturday, 18 July 2015

from Blackwater Quartet, selection 35



 Junk Ether

The water tower’s brick façade absorbs
the early light, the paint gloss on the castings
the red of rowans after frost.
Beyond the fence’s spiral palings, man-high
and too close for neighbour boys to breach,
the door sign warns against intruders,
but the Yale on the door is holed.

Someone has scaled the snaggle boundary,
entered the world of pumps and meters,
of gemstone water shouldered in the air.
The stair within the central structure rises
like a lost Commandment, impersonal
and restrictive, leading to a room of rain,
graffiti-spray confirming entry without warrant.

A weathervane rotates to the wind’s whim,
a great iron X the letters of the compass tip
beneath an arrow-shaft recording change.
One must stand a distance back to see
it rides the cupola; looking up from the fence
it swings from view, invisible below
where whirls of pigeons congregate.

Aerials sprout from upper courses, nothing else
for miles to interfere with news from nowhere,
the satellite scrum that orbits overhead.
From eaves to earth we hammer copper trails
to lead the lightning down
and brighten this restricted zone,
the sudden day invented as we rise.

Define, Specify, Initialise, Call


What is real; where are you now; is your world buffering just ahead of you, millisecond by millisecond?

Most film sets now are created in computers. An animated film, of the Pixar variety, may run for ninety minutes, at twenty-four frames a second, and each second of that time requires fifty hours of complex computer time to create, and behind everything, matrices of code.

Strap-on an Oculus virtual-reality headset, and your kitchen erupts into a Formula One race circuit, or a vast cavern on a distant planet.

Today is someone's distant past, as, long ago, it was someone's distant future. For example, a new breed of actor is emerging who can interpret these time shifts more creatively than actors whose history is one of waiting for physical stage backdrops to be redressed by set painters and carpenters. Talents, prerogatives, and prerequisite attributes change, and the novelty of green-screen worlds insinuates itself in time as a common mantra, until the old world is forgotten, and the reality in front of us is all the reality there is, or at least appears to be. Unless you too are encoded, and your DNA is naturally in-sync with this new reality, you will not exist.

Just outside our field of vision, a shape hurtles by, a bird, flying low and unexpectedly close. Startled, we flinch and turn away sharply, a fifty-thousand-year-old instinct learned in an environs of dense woodland or reed plains. Someone unknown to us has exploited this reflex, generating code that replicates in our mind this ancient first-order reality, but here is no bird shape, no mating territory to be defended, no nesting young.

Where do you want to be? Whom do you want to be? In this new, encoded reality behind the lenses, we stand at the cliff's edge.

I remove the headset, and make a cup of tea. 

Saturday, 11 July 2015

from Blackwater Quartet, selection 34


Komatsu

Sunlight samples the stoneware’s glaze, the pine,
its studied pose of branches.
Tending bonsai, I am taller than Japan,
a scene of lakes in sunshot air, a world augmented.

The hermit Basho
wept to see the celebrated pine at Takekuma
cut for bridge piles in Natori river.

Here, May spills into summer. Swifts’ wings
hook the rising current,
and the maple’s blousy canopy
flushes pinkflamingo into deeper blood of red.

My gardening bent
eludes my wife’s own inclinations to Chablis.
I spend mornings pruning stubborn gnarls,
righting inclinations of the trees
with preference to weathered whorls.

Leaves of iris scattered thus for luck, consider the recluse
Basho, haiku pilgrimage among flowering cherries.

This is the roof of the world.
My wife is floating in the deadwood tines.
Seventeen syllables arabesque— a brushstroke
universe shimmering in her glass.

A lacquered box she carries opens.
In the shadow of the pine, empty dreams pass.
In chrysanthemum armour, swifts rocket.

Instructions for a Poem


Twelve months, twelve pieces of sky


A house with one door, a river always moving


A box of old watch parts, a dark star and its planets


Over the garden wall a woman's laughter, throaty, musical


An old sailing ship in a case, spiderweb for rigging


Ship's rigging, sub-atomic particles colliding


A box of old watch parts, time's river moving


A woman's laughter, twelve pieces of sky