Authors: Fleur Adcock
This book includes all the poems from Fleur Adcock’s
Selected Poems
(Oxford University Press, 1983), which drew upon her earlier OUP collections,
Tigers
(1967),
High Tide in the Garden
(1971),
The Scenic Route
(1974) and
The Inner Harbour
(1979), and
Below Loughrigg
(Bloodaxe Books, 1979), as well as all the poems from her three later OUP collections,
The Incident Book
(1986),
Time-Zones
(1991) and
Looking Back
(1997). It also includes the text of
Hotspur
, a ballad for music by Gillian Whitehead, originally published with monoprints by Gretchen Albrecht (Bloodaxe Books, 1986), and
Meeting the Comet
(Bloodaxe Books, 1988).
Acknowledgements are due to the editors of the following publications in which some of the previously uncollected poems in the
New Poems
section first appeared:
Landfall, Last Words
(Picador, 1999),
Poetry Ireland, Poetry Review
and
Salt
. ‘A Visiting Angel’ was commissioned by Salisbury Festival for the Last Words project in 1999. Fleur Adcock wishes to thank Royal Parks Enterprises and the staff of Kensington Gardens for a Poetry Placement in the summer of 1999.
Among the Roman love-poets, possession
is a rare theme. The locked and flower-hung door,
the shivering lover, are allowed. To more
buoyant moods, the canons of expression
gave grudging sanction. Do we, then, assume,
finding Propertius tear-sodden and jealous,
that Cynthia was inexorably callous?
Plenty of moonlight entered that high room
whose doors had met his Alexandrine battles;
and she, so gay a lutanist, was known
to stitch and doze a night away, alone,
until the poet tumbled in with apples
for penitence and for her head his wreath,
brought from a party, of wine-scented roses –
(the garland’s aptness lying, one supposes,
less in the flowers than in the thorns beneath:
her waking could, he knew, provide his verses
with less idyllic themes). Onto her bed
he rolled the round fruit, and adorned her head;
then gently roused her sleeping mouth to curses.
Here the conventions reassert their power:
the apples fall and bruise, the roses wither,
touched by a sallowed moon. But there were other
luminous nights – (even the cactus flower
glows briefly golden, fed by spiny flesh) –
and once, as he acknowledged, all was singing:
the moonlight musical, the darkness clinging
and she compliant to his every wish.
(in memory of David Herron)
Tarmac, take-off: metallic words conduct us
over that substance, black with spilt rain,
to this event. Sealed, we turn and pause.
Engines churn and throb to a climax, then
up: a hard spurt, and the passionate rise
levels out for this gradual incline.
There was something of pleasure in that thrust
from earth into ignorant cloud; but here,
above all tremors of sensation, rest
replaces motion; secretly we enter
the obscurely gliding current, and encased
in vitreous calm inhabit the high air.
Now I see, beneath the plated wing,
cloud edges withdrawing their slow foam
from shoreline, rippling hills, and beyond, the long
crested range of the land’s height. I am
carried too far by this blind rocketing:
faced with mountains, I remember him
whose death seems a convention of such a view:
another one for the mountains. Another one
who, climbing to stain the high snow
with his shadow, fell, and briefly caught between
sudden earth and sun, projected below
a flicker of darkness; as, now, this plane.
Only air to hold the wings;
only words to hold the story;
only a frail web of cells
to hold heat in the body.
Breath bleeds from throat and lungs
under the last cold fury;
words wither; meaning fails;
steel wings grow heavy.
Headlines announced it, over a double column of type:
the cabled facts, public regret, and a classified list
of your attainments – degrees, scholarships and positions,
and notable feats of climbing. So the record stands:
no place there for my private annotations. The face
that smiles in some doubt from a fuscous half-tone block
stirs me hardly more than those I have mistaken
daily, about the streets, for yours.
I can refer
to my own pictures; and turning first to the easiest,
least painful, I see Dave the raconteur,
playing a shoal of listeners on a casual line
of dry narration. Other images unreel:
your face in a car, silent, watching the dark road,
or animated and sunburnt from your hard pleasures
of snow and rock-face; again, I see you arguing,
practical and determined, as you draw with awkward puffs
at a rare cigarette.
So much, in vivid sequence
memory gives. And then, before I can turn away,
imagination adds the last scene: your eyes bruised,
mouth choked under a murderous weight of snow.
‘When you reach the top of a mountain, keep on climbing’
–
meaning, we may suppose,
to sketch on space the cool arabesques of birds
in plastic air, or those
exfoliating arcs, upward and outward,
of an aeronautic show.
Easier, such a free fall in reverse,
higher than clogging snow
or clutching gravity, than the awkward local
embrace of rocks. And observe
the planets coursing their elliptical race-tracks,
where each completed curve
cinctures a new dimension. Mark these patterns.
Mark, too, how the high
air thins. The top of any mountain
is a base for the sky.
Further by days and oceans than all my flying
you have gone, while here the air insensibly flowing
over a map of mountains drowns my dumbness.
A turn of the earth away, where a crawling dimness
waits now to absorb our light, another
snowscape, named like this one, took you; and neither
rope, nor crumbling ice, nor your unbelieving
uncommitted hands could hold you to living.
Wheels turn; the dissolving air rolls over
an arc of thunder. Gone is gone forever.
Carrying still the dewy rose
for which she’s bound to payment, Beauty goes
trembling through the gruesome wood:
small comfort to her that she’s meek and good.
A branch cracks, and the beast appears:
she sees the fangs, the eyes, the bristly ears,
stifles a scream, and smooths her dress;
but his concern is for his own distress.
He lays his muzzle on her hand,
says ‘Pity me!’ and ‘Can you understand?
Be kind!’ And then goes on to praise
her pretty features and her gentle ways.
Beauty inclines a modest ear,
hears what she has decided she should hear,
and with no thought to ask ‘What then?’
follows the creature to his hairy den.
The beast, like any hero, knows
sweet talk can lead him to
la belle chose.
All my scars are yours. We talk of pledges,
and holding out my hand I show
the faint burn on the palm and the hair-thin
razor-marks at wrist and elbow:
self-inflicted, yes; but your tokens –
made as distraction from a more
inaccessible pain than could have been
caused by cigarette or razor –
and these my slightest marks. In all our meetings
you were the man with the long knives,
piercing the living hopes, cutting connections,
carving and dissecting motives,
and with an expert eye for dagger-throwing:
a showman’s aim. Oh, I could dance
and dodge, as often as not, the whistling blades,
turning on a brave performance
to empty stands. I leaned upon a hope
that this might prove to have been less
a gladiatorial show, contrived for murder,
than a formal test of fitness
(initiation rites are always painful)
to bring me ultimately to your
regard. Well, in a sense it was; for now
I have found some kind of favour:
you have learnt softness; I, by your example,
am well-schooled in contempt; and while
you speak of truce I laugh, and to your pleading
turn a cool and guarded profile.
I have now, you might say, the upper hand:
these knives that bristle in my flesh
increase my armoury and lessen yours.
I can pull out, whet and polish
your weapons, and return to the attack,
well-armed. It is a pretty trick,
but one that offers little consolation.
such a victory would be Pyrrhic,
occurring when my strength is almost spent.
No: I would make an end of fighting
and, bleeding as I am from old wounds,
die like the bee upon a sting.
I would not have you drain
with your sodden lips the flesh that has fed mine,
and leech his bubbling blood to a decline:
not that pain;
nor visit on his mind
that other desiccation, where the wit
shrivels: so to be humbled in not fit
for his kind.
But use acid or flame,
secretly, to brand or cauterise;
and on the soft globes of his mortal eyes
etch my name.
When you were lying on the white sand,
a rock under your head, and smiling,
(circled by dead shells), I came to you
and you said, reaching to take my hand,
‘Lie down.’ So for a time we lay
warm on the sand, talking and smoking,
easy; while the grovelling sea behind
sucked at the rocks and measured the day.
Lightly I fell asleep then, and fell
into a cavernous dream of falling.
It was all the cave-myths, it was all
the myths of tunnel or tower or well –
Alice’s rabbit-hole into the ground,
or the path of Orpheus: a spiral staircase
to hell, furnished with danger and doubt.
Stumbling, I suddenly woke; and found
water about me. My hair was wet,
and you were lying on the grey sand
waiting for the lapping tide to take me:
watching, and lighting a cigarette.
I have nothing to say about this garden.
I do not want to be here, I can’t explain
what happened. I merely opened a usual door
and found this. The rain
has just stopped, and the gravel paths are trickling
with water. Stone lions, on each side,
gleam like wet seals, and the green birds
are stiff with dripping pride.
Not my kind of country. The gracious vistas,
the rose-gardens and terraces, are all wrong –
as comfortless as the weather. But here I am.
I cannot tell how long
I have stood gazing at grass too wet to sit on,
under a sky so dull I cannot read
the sundial, staring along the curving walks
and wondering where they lead;
not really hoping, though, to be enlightened.
It must be morning, I think, but there is no
horizon behind the trees, no sun as clock
or compass. I shall go
and find, somewhere among the formal hedges
or hidden behind a trellis, a toolshed. There
I can sit on a box and wait. Whatever happens
may happen anywhere,
and better, perhaps, among the rakes and flowerpots
and sacks of bulbs than under this pallid sky:
having chosen nothing else, I can at least
choose to be warm and dry.
‘Will I die?’ you ask. And so I enter on
the dutiful exposition of that which you
would rather not know, and I rather not tell you.
To soften my ‘Yes’ I offer compensations –
age and fulfilment (‘It’s so far away;
you will have children and grandchildren by then’)
and indifference (‘By then you will not care’).
No need: you cannot believe me, convinced
that if you always eat plenty of vegetables
and are careful crossing the street you will live for ever.
And so we close the subject, with much unsaid –
this, for instance: Though you and I may die
tomorrow or next year, and nothing remain
of our stock, of the unique, preciously-hoarded
inimitable genes we carry in us,
it is possible that for many generations
there will exist, sprung from whatever seeds,
children straight-limbed, with clear enquiring voices,
bright-eyed as you. Or so I like to think:
sharing in this your childish optimism.