Staring into flames, through the grille of age
Like a late fish, face clothed with fungus,
Keeping its mouth upstream.
Remorseful for what nobody any longer suffers
Nostalgic for what he would not give twopence to see back
Hopeful for what he will not miss when it fails
Who lay a night and a day and a night and a day
Golden-haired, while his friend beside him
Attending a small hole in his brow
Ripened black.
A God
Pain was pulled down over his eyes like a fool’s hat.
They pressed electrodes of pain through the parietals.
He was helpless as a lamb
Which cannot be born
Whose head hangs under its mother’s anus.
Pain was stabbed through his palm, at the crutch of the M,
Made of iron, from earth’s core.
From that pain he hung,
As if he were being weighed.
The cleverness of his fingers availed him
As the bullock’s hooves, in the offal bin,
Avail the severed head
Hanging from its galvanized hook.
Pain was hooked through his foot.
From that pain, too, he hung
As on display.
His patience had meaning only for him
Like the sanguine upside-down grin
Of a hanging half-pig.
There, hanging,
He accepted the pain beneath his ribs
Because he could no more escape it
Than the poulterer’s hanging hare,
Hidden behind eyes growing concave,
Can escape
What has replaced its belly.
He could not understand what had happened.
Or what he had become.
UNCOLLECTED
Remembering Teheran
How it hung
In the electrical loom
Of the Himalayas – I remember
The spectre of a rose.
All day the flag on the military camp flowed South.
In the Shah’s Evin Motel
The Manageress – a thunderhead Atossa –
Wept on her bed
Or struck awe. Tragic Persian
Quaked her bosom – precarious balloons of water –
But still nothing worked.
Everything hung on a prayer, in the hanging dust.
With a splash of keys
She ripped through the lock, filled my room, sulphurous,
With plumbers –
Twelve-year-olds, kneeling to fathom
A pipeless tap sunk in a blank block wall.
*
I had a funny moment
Beside the dried-up river of boulders. A huddle of families
Were piling mulberries into wide bowls, under limp, dusty trees.
All the big males, in their white shirts,
Drifted out towards me, hands hanging –
I could see the bad connections sparking inside their heads
As I picked my way among thistles
Between dead-drop wells – open man-holes
Parched as snake-dens –
Later, three stoned-looking Mercedes,
Splitting with arms and faces, surfed past me
Warily over a bumpy sea of talc,
The uncials on their number-plates like fragments of scorpions.
*
I imagined all Persia
As a sacred scroll, humbled to powder
By the God-conducting script on it –
The lightning serifs of Zoroaster –
The primal cursive.
*
Goats, in charred rags,
Eyes and skulls
Adapted to sunstroke, woke me
Sunbathing among the moon-clinker.
When one of them slowly straightened into a goat-herd
I knew I was in the wrong century
And wrongly dressed.
All around me stood
The tense, abnormal thistles, desert fanatics;
Politicos, in their zinc-blue combat issue;
Three-dimensional crystal theorems
For an optimum impaling of the given air;
Arsenals of pragmatic ideas –
I retreated to the motel terrace, to loll there
And watch the officers half a mile away, exercising their obsolete horses.
A bleaching sun, cobalt-cored,
Played with the magnetic field of the mountains.
And prehistoric giant ants, outriders, long-shadowed,
Cast in radiation-proof metals,
Galloped through the land, lightly and unhindered,
Stormed my coffee-saucer, drinking the stain –
At sunset
The army flag rested for a few minutes
Then began to flow North.
*
I found a living thread of water
Dangling from a pipe. A snake-tongue flicker.
An incognito whisper.
It must have leaked and smuggled itself, somehow,
From the high Mother of Snows, halfway up the sky.
It wriggled these last inches to ease
A garden of pot-pourri, in a tindery shade of peach-boughs,
And played there, a fuse crackling softly –
As the whole city
Sank in the muffled drumming
Of a subterranean furnace.
And over it
The desert’s bloom of dust, the petroleum smog, the transistor commotion
Thickened a pinky-purple thunderlight.
The pollen of the thousands of years of voices
Murmurous, radio-active, rubbing to flash-point –
*
Scintillating through the migraine
The world-authority on Islamic Art
Sipped at a spoonful of yoghurt
And smiling at our smiles described his dancing
Among self-beheaded dancers who went on dancing with their heads
(But only God, he said, can create a language).
Journalists proffered, on platters of silence,
Split noses, and sliced-off ears and lips –
*
Chastened, I listened. Then for the belly-dancer
(Who would not dance on my table, would not kiss me
Through her veil, spoke to me only
Through the mouth
Of her demon-mask
Warrior drummer)
I composed a bouquet – a tropic, effulgent
Puff of publicity, in the style of Attar,
And saw myself translated by the drummer
Into her liquid
Lashing shadow, those arabesques of God,
That thorny fount.
Bones
Bones is a crazy pony.
Moon-white – star-mad.
All skull and skeleton.
Her hooves pound. The sleeper awakes with a cry.
Who has broken her in?
Who has mounted her and come back
Or kept her?
She lifts under them, the snaking crest of a bullwhip.
Hero by hero they go –
Grimly get astride
And their hair lifts.
She laughs, smelling the battle – their cry comes back.
Who can live her life?
Every effort to hold her or turn her falls off her
Like rotten harness.
Their smashed faces come back, the wallets and the watches.
And this is the stunted foal of the earth –
She that kicks the cot
To flinders and is off.
Do not Pick up the Telephone
That plastic Buddha jars out a Karate screech
Before the soft words with their spores
The cosmetic breath of the gravestone
Death invented the phone it looks like the altar of death
Do not worship the telephone
It drags its worshippers into actual graves
With a variety of devices, through a variety of disguised voices
Sit godless when you hear the religious wail of the telephone
Do not think your house is a hide-out it is a telephone
Do not think you walk your own road, you walk down a telephone
Do not think you sleep in the hand of God you sleep in the mouthpiece of a telephone
Do not think your future is yours it waits upon a telephone
Do not think your thoughts are your own thoughts they are the toys of the telephone
Do not think these days are days they are the sacrificial priests of the telephone
The secret police of the telephone
O phone get out of my house
You are a bad god
Go and whisper on some other pillow
Do not lift your snake head in my house
Do not bite any more beautiful people
You plastic crab
Why is your oracle always the same in the end?
What rake-off for you from the cemeteries?
Your silences are as bad
When you are needed, dumb with the malice of the clairvoyant insane
The stars whisper together in your breathing
World’s emptiness oceans in your mouthpiece
Stupidly your string dangles into the abysses
Plastic you are then stone a broken box of letters
And you cannot utter
Lies or truth, only the evil one
Makes you tremble with sudden appetite to see somebody undone
Blackening electrical connections
To where death bleaches its crystals
You swell and you writhe
You open your Buddha gape
You screech at the root of the house
Do not pick up the detonator of the telephone
A flame from the last day will come lashing out of the telephone
A dead body will fell out of the telephone
Do not pick up the telephone
Reckless Head
When it comes down to it
Hair is afraid. Words from within are afraid.
They sheer off, like a garment,
Cool, treacherous, no part of you.
Hands the same, feet, and all blood
Till nothing is left. Nothing stays
But what your gaze can carry.
And maybe you vomit even that, like a too-much poison.
Then it is
That the brave hunger of your skull
Supplants you. It stands where you stood
And shouts, with a voice you can’t hear,
For what you can’t take.
from
Prometheus on His Crag
2
Prometheus On His Crag
Relaxes
In the fact that it has happened.
The blue wedge through his breastbone, into the rock,
Unadjusted by vision or prayer – so.
His eyes, brainless police.
His brain, simple as an eye.
Nevertheless, now he exults – like an eagle
In the broadening vastness, the reddening dawn
Of the fact
That cannot be otherwise
And could not have been otherwise,
And never can be otherwise.
And now, for the first time
relaxing
helpless
The Titan feels his strength.
3
Prometheus On His Crag
Pestered by birds roosting and defecating,
The chattering static of the wind-honed summit,
The clusterers to heaven, the sun-darkeners –
Shouted a world’s end shout.
Then the swallow folded its barbs and fell,
The dove’s bubble of fluorescence burst,
Nightingale and cuckoo
Plunged into padded forests where the woodpecker
Eyes bleached insane
Howled laughter into dead holes.
The birds became what birds have ever since been,
Scratching, probing, peering for a lost world –
A world of holy, happy notions shattered
By the shout
That brought Prometheus peace
And woke the vulture.
9
Now I know I never shall
Be let stir.
The man I fashioned and the god I fashioned
Dare not let me stir.
This leakage of cry these face-ripples
Calculated for me – for mountain water
Dammed to powerless stillness.
What secret stays
Stilled under my stillness?
Not even I know.
Only he knows – that bird, that
Filthy-gleeful emissary and
The hieroglyph he makes of my entrails
Is all he tells.
10
Prometheus On His Crag
Began to admire the vulture
It knew what it was doing
It went on doing it
Swallowing not only his liver
But managing also to digest its guilt
And hang itself again just under the sun
Like a heavenly weighing scales
Balancing the gift of life
And the cost of the gift
Without a tremor
As if both were nothing.
14
Prometheus On His Crag
Sees the wind
Whip all things to whip all things
The light whips the water the water whips the light
And men and women are whipped
By invisible tongues
They claw and tear and labour forward
Or cower cornered under the whipping
They whip their animals and their engines
To get them from under the whips
They lift their faces and look all round
For their master and tormentor
When they collapse to curl inwards
They are like cut plants and blind
Already beyond pain or fear
Even the snails are whipped
The swifts too screaming to outstrip the whip
Even as if being were a whipping
Even the earth leaping
Like a great ungainly top
19
Prometheus On His Crag
Shouts and his words
Go off in every direction
Like birds
Like startled birds
They cry the way they fly away
Start up others which follow
For words are the birds of everything –
So soon
Everything is on the wing and gone
So speech starts hopefully to hold
Pieces of the wordy earth together
But pops to space-silence and space-cold
Emptied by words
Scattered and gone.
And the mouth shuts
Savagely on a mouthful
Of space-fright which makes the ears ring.