Authors: Barry MacSweeney
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.)