Wolf Tongue (29 page)

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Authors: Barry MacSweeney

BOOK: Wolf Tongue
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First always the birds, buds, the wind-driven wild

running burn. Each morning, each season, so high in the sky.

Before it turned into a barbed wire compound.

Wild freedom of Sparty Lea turned into a Nazi camp.

Pride brought it down to this, wild self-willed pride,

family difference, sister and brother, and wild unlifting

everlasting vanity. Pull down I say pull down, but it

was too late. We stand together upon the peak and crest

your tongue still clucking and purring. You’re the real poet!

You point at

       the clouds sweeping from Ireland towards the forgotten

sad hotels of Dunbar. Chucklehen, hazel-haired and eyed,

you always were the best. The two daughters you have now

in Haltwhistle and a strong husband who works from dawn

till end of day. Strong and upright and heavenly Tom strong.

I’ve lost my new love. Nowt, blown away

                                               feathery leaf, upland wind.

If anyone knows about sullen loneliness, you do

Yet there’s a grin in the wind, heartless and cold

There’s dark in the darkness, beauty of streams

I low my beams to you, from tunnel to tunnel

as if the frozen air had a distinct personality

Standing at the lonnen head, holding leeks, you

sawed my glance in half with yours. What keen eyes!

Such strange, out-dated clothes. What’s inside counts.

Leaning into the tall grass grandness of your alert stance

towards the west and the brilliant beauties of Ireland,

I know now why you took the sickle hook

backing the beasts into their shutdown shed

You chopped the gate for want of sound

but you had sound, all sound, my purr mistress

my fantastic slavver merchant, when we peeled the sky

together we had water and silence and fire and togetherness

the lights of all you didn’t say knots my life and all dreams.

Slit of light across the sky above the city: 7 a.m:

raining and me wandering

Pearl in her moonshawl

in the sky gazing down at me – saying,

stay cool just like the frost on the lawns.

You’ll melt in time.

Your broken heart will be warmed again.

Just look at the upcoming sunne.

Anger is hot, and Bar you have too much of it.

Passion is fine, fine, a fine gripping thing,

like we gripped fingers

by the Prudhoe bluebell beds, but hot temper is not.

We were hot, but never blasted

                                            were we

        like the clearing at night of the Consett Steelworks

ovens before the Pharisees shut them down.

Do you remember the flames we saw

from the rim of the law

holding hands             and although
you
spoke

it was
my
tongue and cleft palate

                          also containing music, music, music,

and we breathed

in each other’s mouths, so young – innocent even – and the flames high

200 feet from the ovens in the air

            like Blake’s vision of Adam in the arms of heaven

of which you told me.

God help us

you full of talk of a city called Edinburgh

and me in silence so very deep we were so very much in love.

And the burns and sikes and streams

though shallow

were deep music to us.

You trout-tickler,

                     you flower-picker,

                        climber in willow trees, me laughing below

as best I could laugh, though you never thought it ugly.

Indeed the word you used was the word beautiful,

pinning cowslips behind my ears,

you patting and running fingers through our

beckwashed hair.

Lying by the marigold beds

bare toes entwined, then dancing under branches

before the elms ever died. But our mutual hearts never did.

Bar it is 7 and your raining rage

must cease

under my morning moon.

In my dawn shawl looking dawndown upon you

in your foot-striding fellhighhighupuptopheavyrainbeatingrainrain.

We have always walked together so long.

In the long grass we walked and walked forever so long so very language long

and I could say so once you had the slate in my lap.

My tongue blank – FOREVER, word we wrote on a slate, remember

when you taught me? – only my hands and eyes moving now – two

daughters we could have had –

but I am looking kindly and lovingly on you

Please do it

               – cool your raging fire lovelorn heart – for me.

And love me – forever.

Darkly-harnessed light will fall like a shawl

and be the hunky-dory

death of us all. A hawk-wing death,

a shrike strike death, a death in a lair.

This mossy path, frilled with feldspar

to prick your pearly toes, fresh from the marigolds,

the little stile not squeaking now, lubricated

hinges, hymns to the silence of adult interference,

new sunken screwheads glinty in sunlight,

the death of the white linen: our cot-death.

It was all, all of it, all for us, from the wonders

of our mysterious heaven

to the trout’s opal seed-sac bubbling with jewels.

The water was anointment water,

a cool upland baptism. You, you

were Delilah and Mary-of-the-tears,

of the unspoiled lips lapping rushing whitewater.

Milton was a blind man and we knew nothing of him.

Paradise Lost to the ears of his daughter.

Where are they now, our camps of wild primrose?

Now we are adults too, all grown-up.

You’re there, I’m here, miles from our happiness.

We are not stone, but we are in the grinder.

Everything is lost, and we are dust and done for.

 

 

(Titles are shown in italics, first lines in roman type.)

 

  • After copulation,
    62
  • All aboard, it’s party time, with,
    206
  • All of you with consonants and vowels,
    211
  • alone on Ranter’s Rock,
    159
  • And all we could hear was the smelt of bottercoppes,
    317
  • ‘and the warm weather is holding’,
    42
  • & tie strings together,
    41
  • Angel Showing Lead Shot Damage,
    230
  • Anne Sexton Blues,
    263
  • Argent moon with bruised shawl,
    197
  • Arrest me asleep, crashed out,
    238
  • Banged my right hand,
    202
  • Bare Feet In Marigolds,
    321
  • BBC monochrome newsreel flickers,
    74
  • Beak Ode,
    55
  • beaming Anaconda of parthian monumentalism your,
    45
  • bee-like,
    68
  • Beneath the worm’s eye view people. The clubfoot,
    132
  • Beulah,
    39
  • Blackbird,
    82
  • Black Torch Sunrise,
    74
  • Blitzkrieg Homage,
    311
  • Blizzard blossom’s pink fumes: between,
    304
  • Blizzard:
    So Much Bad Fortune,
    212
  • Blossom Ode:Eltham Palace,
    66
  • Brother Wolf,
    23
  • Brown stamps forever,
    312
  • Buying Christmas Wrapping Paper on January
    12,
    222
  • Cavalry At Calvary,
    206
  • Chatterton Ode
    (‘sleek beasts…’),
    40
  • Chatterton Ode
    (‘Time is a jagged mark…’),
    37
  • Chaucer came here,
    66
  • Colonel B,
    88
  • Comb the crawling morning chill chilling sky in search for vodkafire,
    255
  • Crepuscular phantoms energise manhood, soap,
    48
  • Cry and she wanders, through,
    50
  • Cushy Number,
    320
  • Daddy Wants to Murder Me,
    225
  • Daft Patter,
    322
  • Darkly-harnessed light will fall like a shawl,
    325
  • Dark Was the Night and Cold Was the Ground,
    208
  • Dead Man’s Handle,
    255
  • death beholder,
    46
  • Demons, big-hatted and hard-hatted, far as gutter-toppled,
    237
  • Demons in My Pocket,
    238
  • Demons Swarm upon Our Man and Tell the World He’s Lost
    ,
    244
  • Disease Ode Carrot Hair,
    51
  • Don’t Leave Me,
    295
  • Down from the rain-soaked law,
    198
  • Dream Graffiti,
    67
  • Dunce Ode,
    47
  • Eva, my eternal spanked love, and Speer, before he went,
    312
  • Far Cliff Babylon,
    78
  • Fever,
    203
  • Finnbar’s Lament,
    179
  • First always the birds, buds, the wind-driven wild,
    321
  • Flamebearer,
    170
  • Flame Ode
    (‘and the warm weather is holding…’),
    42
  • Flame Ode
    (‘Make your naked phone call moan…’),
    57
  • Flame Ode
    (‘Two hawks and a plover swoop…’),
    36
  • For Andrei Voznesensky, for her,
    12
  • Forgive me for my almost unforgivable delay,
    218
  • Fox Brain Apple Ode,
    52
  • Free Pet with Every Cage,
    220
  • From The Land Of Tumblestones,
    207
  • Fusillade of the sun’s eye-piercing darts,
    216
  • Get out the shotgun put it in the gunrack,
    220
  • Gnashed fervour licks down like fire,
    233
  • God bless you little girl the lean dry hand,
    189
  • God forgive me,
    179
  • Good morning Pearl, good morning John,
    204
  • Grassblade glintstreak in one of the last mornings,
    199
  • Hammers and pinions, sockets, fatal faces,
    209
  • Hellhound Memos,
    185
    –92
  • her name was Bonney and although she wasn’t registered,
    44
  • Her wild oregano,
    61
  • Here We Go,
    317
  • Himself Bright Starre Northern Within,
    257
  • Homage to John Everett, Marine Painter,
    1876–1949,
    33
  • Hooray Demons Salute the Forever Lost Parliament,
  • How sweet today the scents and air perfumes,
    249
  • I am gnawing jawface, furman, odd cove,
    253
  • I am irregular as poker chips,
    12
  • I could never speak,
    210
  • If anyone knows about sullen loneliness, you do,
    322
  • I had endless injections myself,
    301
  • I knew Stalin and knew him well,
    311
  • I’ll be down at the dock in the morning,
    191
  • I Looked Down On a Child Today,
    314
  • In with the Stasi,
    233
  • Indigo robe her arm is wrapped within. Amber,
    37
  • Influx of new crass mourning. Shrouds,
    38
  • I put my walking stick,
    53
  • Irish poets,
    292
  • I smashed my wings,
    195
  • I tear apart the smart brochures,
    212
  • i walk to the annexe,
    33
  • I write poetry at the age of seven and daddy wants to murder me,
    225
  • Jim Morrison Ode,
    37
  • John Bunyan to Johnny Rotten,
    284
  • Jury Vet,
    101
  • Just Twenty Two – And I Don’t Mind Dying,
    20
  • Kein Eingang Liz gone hard from the broken phallic window,
    95
  • La Rage,
    292
  • Lash Ode,
    53
  • Last night tells me today what went,
    15
  • Let loose at morning from frost pockets the wind rips,
    222
  • Let the Thunder Roll,
    311
  • Let’s dab a double finger half-pissed kiss on Muddy’s lips. O,
    230
  • Levellers and prince-fingerers quartered in the heather,
    190
  • Linda Manning Is a Whore,
    190
  • Listen, hark, attend; wait a moment,
    196
  • Liz Hard,
    95
  • Liz Hard II,
    99
  • Looking Down From The West Window,
    195
  • Lost Pearl,
    213
  •  
  • Make your naked pencil mine. Play,
    58
  • Make your naked phone call moan, listen,
    57
  • Me the multiplex moron, multigenerational,
    187
  • Mia Farrow,
    61
  • Mony Ryal Ray,
    200
  • Moon afloat, drunken opal shuggy boat,
    215
  • Moon Ode,
    39
  • Much desired landscape loved keenly several lifetimes,
    320
  • My hands are in the clouds again, thumping the sun,
    213
  • NAZI neon burned the blitzkrieg heart Liz hid,
    99
  • New Ode,
    37
  • Nil by Mouth: The Tongue Poem,
    237
  • No Buses To Damascus,
    201
  • No Such Thing,
    199
  • Nothing Are These Times,
    253
     
  • Now it’s time to put aside and forget,
    246
  • Now that the vast furtherance of widespread publicity,
    188
  • Ode,
    43
  • Ode Black Spur,
    60
  • Ode Grey Rose,
    46
  • Ode Long Kesh,
    41
  • Ode Peace Fog,
    50
  • Ode:Resolution,
    56
  • Odes,
    35
    –72
  • Ode Stem Hair,
    48
  • Ode to Beauty Strength and Joy and in Memory of the Demons,
    218
  • Ode to the Unborn,
    44
  • Ode White Sail,
    59
  • of Barry and Jacqueline,
    246
  • O hello, Othello, black and green bastardo,
    266
  • O just to vex me inside the bottle the wind stayed still,
    275
  • OKAY CRIMSON VARNISHED REDHEAD YOU’RE THE BIG ATTRACTION NOW,
    101
  • O let me plunge my feverhands into his clotted throat. Let me free,
    224
  • Once I was a quiet man before Eva,
    311
  • On the Burning Down of the Salvation Army Men’s Palace, Dogs Bank, Newcastle,
    14
  • O pulchritudinous orb de la dish scourer,
    49
  • O pusilanimous orb de la Brillo,
    47
  • O the rare gold,
    207
  • Open your black-backed gull,
    55
  • Orphan consorts & vipers under glass. Hair,
    88
  • Panther Freckles,
    49
  • Pasolini Demon Memo,
    235
  • Pass the aconite,
    56
  • Pearl,
    192
    –216
  • Pearl Against the Barbed Wire,
    249
  • Pearl Alone,
    205
  • Pearl and Barry Pick Rosehips for The Good of the Country,
    209
  • Pearl at 4 a.m.,
    215
  • Pearl: beautiful lustre, highly prized gem,
    208
  • Pearl, I’m singing Fever to you,
    203
  • Pearl In The Silver Morning
    (poem),
    323
  • Pearl in the Silver Morning
    (sequence),
    319
    –25
  • Pearl Says,
    198
  • Pearl Suddenly Awake,
    202
  • Pearl’s Final Say-So,
    216
  • Pearl’s Poem of Joy and Treasure,
    214
  • Pearl’s Utter Brilliance,
    197
  • Peristalsis writhes a sudden knot &,
    38
     
  • Phantom, phantom,
    163
  • Postcards from Hitler,
    309
    –12
  • Rain, rain, rain again and bonerolling bloodthunder,
    248
  • Ranter
    (poem),
    140
  • Ranter
    (sequence),
    139
    –177
  • Ranter loping,
    140
  • Ranter’s Reel,
    163
  • Real Ode,
    63
  • Rock litmus. Titration from Springfield, she,
    20
  • rude unwelcome guest,
    82
  • Sample the hardness, trite mania,
    51
  • Selected from the gutter realm,
    67
  • Shaking Minds with Robespierre,
    190
  • She walks up. Stands in the air. It is raining,
    39
  • Show me the door,
    59
  • Shreds of Mercy/The Merest Shame,
    231
  • Shunned, ignored, cast off, slung in the bin,
    231
  • Skybrightness drove me,
    200
  • sleek beasts,
    40
  • Slit of light across the sky above the city: 7 a.m,
    323
  • Smartism seems to be the best deal,
    244
  • Snake Paint Sky,
    45
  • Snipe Drumming,
    159
  • So there you are lying down here breasts,
    265
  • Spangled balconies abound,
    52
  • Spout, pout, spout. Put my spittle all about,
    214
  • Spurs of neonised leather,
    60
  • Strap Down in Snowville,
    266
  • Sunk at my crossroads, hellhounds baying,
    186
  • Sunk in my darkness at daylight,
    186
  • Swedenborg Ode,
    38
  • Sweeno is two people – at least. Sweeno the night crawling homme man,
    269
  • Sweeno, Sweeno,
    269
  • Sweet Advocate,
    304
  • Sweet Jesus: Pearl’s Prayer,
    196
  • The Amazing Eagle Has Landed,
    310
  • The bluebell sky, the sky of snowdrops,
    310
  • The Book of Demons,
    217
    –90
  • The feet are white boats. Hands are,
    36
  • The Final Bavarian Hilltop Postcard,
    310
  • the fire-crowned terrain,
    23
  • The Horror,
    242
  • The horror of the hospital for us both,
    242
  • The Jesus Christ Almighty is a barely stripling bare-chested biker,
    235
  • The Last Bud,
    15
  • The long shadows of gold October stamped into the earth of England,
    284
  • There is absolutely no record,
    257
  • The Shells Her Auburn Hair Did Show,
    204
  • The totemic fuse of non-events is rising like a fume,
    315
  • The very low odour tough acrylic formula,
    188
  • They stood smoking damp and salvaged,
    14
  • This is the dirt, far,
    54
  • Those Sandmartin Tails,
    210
  • Time is a jagged mark upon the wrist. See,
    37
  • Tom in the Market Square Outside Boots,
    280
  • Tom you’re walking up & down the pill hill again,
    280
  • Torchlit smoulderer,
    170
  • Torpedo,
    58
  • Totem Banking,
    315
  • Trouble on all side today up and down,
    189
  • Two hawks and a plover swoop,
    36

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