Authors: Helen Dunmore
Where have you gone
small child,
the damson bloom
on your eyes
the still heap
of your flesh
lightly composed
in a grey shawl,
your skull’s pulse
stains you,
the veins slip deep.
Two lights burn
at the mouth of the cave
where the air’s thin
and the tunnels boom
with your slippery blood.
Your unripe cheeks cling
to the leaves, to the wall,
your grasp unpeels
and your bruises murmur
while blueness clouds
on the down of your eyes,
your tears erode
and your smile files
through your lips like a soldier
who shoots at the sky
and you flash up in silver;
where are you now
little one,
peeled almond,
damson bloom?
It’s past nine and breakfast is over.
With morning frost on my hands I cross
the white grass, and go nowhere.
It’s icy: domestic. A grain
of coffee burns my tongue. Its heat
folds into the first cigarette.
The garden and air are still.
I am a stone and the world falls from me.
I feel untouchable – a new planet
where life knows it isn’t safe to begin.
From silver flakes of ash I shape
a fin and watch it with anguish.
I hear apples rolling above me;
November twigs; a bare existence –
my sister is a marvellous
dolphin, flanking her young.
Her blood flushes her skin
but mine is trapped. Occasional moments
allow me to bathe in their dumb sweetness.
My loose pips ripen. My night subsides
rushing, like the long glide of an owl.
Raw peace. A pale, frost-lit morning.
The black treads of my husband on the lawn
as he goes from the house to the loft
laying out apples.
In a back garden I’m painting
the outside toilet in shell and antelope.
The big domestic bramley tree
hangs close to me, rosy and leafless.
Sometimes an apple thumps
into the bushes I’ve spattered with turpentine
while my brush moves with a suck
over the burnt-off door frame.
Towels from the massage parlour
are out on the line next door:
all those bodies sweating into them
each day – the fabric stiffening –
towels bodiless and sex over.
I load the brush with paint again
and I hear myself breathing.
Sun slips off the wall
so the yard is cool
and lumbered with shadows,
and then a cannonade of apples
punches the wall and my arms,
the ripe stripes on their cheeks fall open,
flesh spurts and the juices fizz and glisten.
The slowly moving river in summer
where bulrushes, mallow and water forget-me-not
slip to their still faces.
A child's body
joins their reflections,
his plastic boat
drifts into midstream
and though I lean down to
brown water that smells of peppermint
I can't get at it:
my willow branch flails and pushes the boat outwards.
He smiles quickly
and tells me it doesn't matter;
my feet grip in the mud
and mash blue flowers under them.
Then we go home
masking with summer days the misery
that has haunted a whole summer.
I think once of the Egyptian woman
who drew a baby from the bulrushes
hearing it mew in the damp
odrorous growth holding its cradle.
There's nothing here but the boat
caught by its string
and through this shimmering day I struggle
drawn down by the webbed
years, the child's life cradled within.
So, how decisive a house is:
quilted, a net of blood and green
droops on repeated actions at nightfall.
A bath run through the wall
comforts the older boy sleeping
meshed in the odours of breath and Calpol
while in the maternity hospital
ancillaries rinse out the blood bottles;
the feel and the spore
of babies’ sleep stays here.
Later, some flat-packed plastic
swells to a parachute of oxygen
holding the sick through their downspin,
now I am well enough, I
iron, and place the folded sheets in bags
from which I shall take them, identical,
after the birth of my child.
And now the house closes us,
close on us,
like fruit we rest in its warm branches
and though it’s time for the child to come
nobody knows it, the night passes
while I sleepwalk the summer heat.
Months shunt me and I bring you
like an old engine hauling the blue
spaces that flash between track and train time.
Mist rises, smelling of petrol’s
burnt offerings, new born,
oily and huge, the lorries drum
on Stokes’ Croft,
out of the bathroom mirror the sky
is blue and pale as a Chinese mountain.
and I breathe in.
It’s time to go now. I take nothing
but breath, thinned.
A blown-out dandelion globe
might choose my laundered body to grow in.
Patrick, I cannot write
such poems for you as a father might
coming upon your smile,
your mouth half sucking, half sleeping,
your tears shaken from your eyes like sparklers
break up the nightless weeks of your life:
lighthearted, I go to the kitchen
and cook breakfast, aching as you grow hungry.
Mornings are plain as the pages
of books in sedentary schooldays.
If I were eighty and lived next door
hanging my pale chemises on the porch
would I envy or pity my neighbour?
Polished and still as driftwood
she stands smoothing her dahlias;
liquid, leaking,
I cup the baby’s head to my shoulder:
the child’s a boy and will not share
one day these obstinate, exhausted mornings.
The other babies were more bitter than you
Patrick, with your rare, tentative cry,
your hours of steep, snuffing the medical air.
Give me time for your contours, your fierce drinking.
Like land that has been parched for half a summer
and smiles, sticky with feeding
I have examined and examined you
at midnight, at two days; I have accompanied you
to the blue world on another floor of the hospital
where half-formed babies open their legs like anemones
and nurses, specialised as astronauts,
operate around the apnoea pillows.
But here you bloomed. You survived,
sticky with nectar. X-rayed, clarified,
you came back, dirty and peaceful.
And now like sunflowers settling their petals
for the last strokes of light in September
your eyes turn to me at 3 a.m.
You meet my stiff, mucousy face
and snort, beating your hand on my breast
as one more feed flows through the darkness, timed
to nothing now but the pull of your mouth.
Cool as sleep, the crates ring.
Birds stir and my milk stings me;
you slip my grasp. I never find you
in dreams – only your mouth
not crying
your sleep still pressing on mine.
The carpets shush. The house back silences.
I turn with you, wide-lipped
blue figure
into the underground of babies
and damp mothers fumbling at bras
and the first callus grows on us
weaned from your night smiles.
Now I write off a winter of growth.
First, hands batting the air,
forehead still smeared,
– now, suddenly, he stands there
upright and rounded as a tulip.
The garden sparkles through the windows.
Dark and a heap in my arms;
the thermostat clicking all night.
Out in the road beached cars and winter
so cold five minutes would finish you.
Light fell in its pools
each evening. Tranquilly
it stamped the same circles.
Friends shifted their boots on the step.
Their faces gleamed from their scarves
that the withdrawal of day
brought safety.
Experience so stitched, intimate,
mutes me.
Now I’m desperate for solitude.
The house enrages me.
I go miles, pushing the pram,
thinking about Christina Rossetti’s
black dresses – my own absent poems.
I go miles, touching his blankets proudly,
drawing the quilt to his lips.
I write of winter and the approaches to winter.
Air clings to me, rotten Lord Derbies,
patched in their skins, thud down.
The petals of Michaelmas daisies give light.
Now I’m that glimpsed figure for children
occupying doorways and windows;
that breath of succulence
ignored till nightfall.
I go out before the curtains are drawn
and walk close to the windows
which shine secretly.
Bare to the street
red pleats of a lampshade expose
bodies in classic postures, arguing.
Their senseless jokes explode with saliva.
I mop and tousle.
It’s three o’clock in the cul-de-sac.
Out of the reach of traffic,
free from the ply
of bodies glancing and crossing,
the shopping, visiting,
cashing orders at the post office,
I lie on my bed in the sun
drawing down streams of babble.
This room holds me, a dull
round bulb stubbornly
rising year after year in the same place.
In the chemist’s at night-time
swathed counters and lights turned down
lean and surround us.
Waiting for our prescriptions
we clock these sounds:
a baby’s peaked hush,
hawked breath.
I pay a pound
and pills fall in my curled palms.
Holding their white packages tenderly
patients track back to the pain.
‘Why is the man shouting?’ Oliver asks me.
I answer, ‘He wants to go home.’
Softly, muffled by cloth
the words still come
and the red-streaked drunkard goes past us,
rage scalding us.
I would not dare bring happiness
into the chemist’s at night-time.
Its gift-wrapped lack of assistance still presses
as suffering closes the blinded windows.
This evening clouds darken the street quickly,
more and more grey
flows throngh the yellowing treetops,
traffic flies downhill
roaring and spangled with faces,
full buses
rock past the Sussex Place roundabout.
In Sussex the line of Downs
has no trees to uncover,
no lick of the town's wealth, blue
in smoke, no gold, fugitive dropping.
In villages old England
checks rainfall, sick of itself.
Here there are scraps and flashes:
bellying food smells â last-minute buying â
plantain, quarters of ham.
The bread shop lady pulls down
loaves that will make tomorrow's cheap line.
On offer are toothpaste and shoe soles
mended same day for Monday's interview
and a precise network of choices
for old women collecting their pension
on Thursday, already owing the rent man.
Some places are boarded. You lose your expectancy â
soon it appears you never get home. Still
it's fine on evenings and in October
to settle here. Still the lights splashing look beautiful.
My nephews with almond faces
black hair like bunces of grapes
(the skin stroked and then bruised
the head buried and caressed)
he takes his son’s head in his hands
kisses it blesses it leaves it:
the boy with circles under his eyes like damsons
not the blond baby, the stepson.
In the forest stories about the black
father the jew the incubus
if there are more curses they fall on us.
Behind the swinging ropes of their isolation
my nephews wait, sucking their sweets.
The hall fills quickly and neatly.
If they keep still as water
I’ll know them.
I look but I can’t be certain:
my nephews with heavy eyelids
blowing in the last touches of daylight
my sisters raising them up like torches.