Authors: Fleur Adcock
It is not one thing, but more one thing than others:
the carved spoon broken in its case, a slate split on the roof,
dead leaves falling upon dead grass littered
with feathers, and the berries ripe too soon.
All of a piece and all in pieces, the dry mouth failing
to say it. I am sick with symbols.
Here is the thing itself: it is a drought.
I must learn it and live it drably through.
This truth-telling is well enough
looking into the slaty eyes of the visitants
acknowledging the messages they bring
but they plod past so familiarly
mouldy faces droning about acceptance
that one almost looks for a real monster
spiny and gaping as the fine mad fish
in the corner of that old shipwreck painting
rearing its red gullet out of the foam.
Strange room, from this angle:
white door open before me,
strange bed, mechanical hum, white lights.
There will be stranger rooms to come.
As I almost slept I saw the deep flower opening
and leaned over into it, gratefully.
It swimmingly closed in my face. I was not ready.
It was not death, it was acceptance.
*
Our thin patient cat died purring,
her small triangular head tilted back,
the nurse’s fingers caressing her throat,
my hand on her shrunken spine; the quick needle.
That was the second death by cancer.
The first is not for me to speak of.
It was telephone calls and brave letters
and a friend’s hand bleeding under the coffin.
*
Doctor, I am not afraid of a word.
But neither do I wish to embrace that visitor,
to engulf it as Hine-Nui-te-Po
engulfed Maui; that would be the way of it.
And she was the winner there: her womb crushed him.
Goddesses can do these things.
But I have admitted the gloved hands and the speculum
and must part my ordinary legs to the surgeon’s knife.
Nellie has only one breast
ample enough to make several.
Her quilted dressing-gown softens
to semi-doubtful this imbalance
and there’s no starched vanity
in our abundant ward-mother:
her silvery hair’s in braids, her slippers
loll, her weathered smile holds true.
When she dresses up in her black
with her glittering marcasite brooch on
to go for the weekly radium treatment
she’s the bright star of the taxi-party –
whatever may be growing under her ribs.
*
Doris hardly smokes in the ward –
and hardly eats more than a dreamy spoonful –
but the corridors and bathrooms
reek of her Players Number 10,
and the drug-trolley pauses
for long minutes by her bed.
Each week for the taxi-outing
she puts on her skirt again
and has to pin the slack waistband
more tightly over her scarlet sweater.
Her face, a white shadow through smoked glass,
lets Soho display itself unregarded.
*
Third in the car is Mrs Golding
who never smiles. And why should she?
The senior consultant on his rounds
murmurs in so subdued a voice
to the students marshalled behind
that they gather in, forming a cell,
a cluster, a rosette around him
as he stands at the foot of my bed
going through my notes with them,
half-audibly instructive, grave.
The slight ache as I strain forward
to listen still seems imagined.
‘How are you this morning?’ ‘Fine,
very well, thank you.’ I smile too.
And possibly all that murmurs within me
is the slow dissolving of stitches.
I am out in the supermarket choosing –
this very afternoon, this day –
picking up tomatoes, cheese, bread,
things I want and shall be using
to make myself a meal, while they
eat their stodgy suppers in bed:
Janet with her big freckled breasts,
her prim Scots voice, her one friend,
and never in hospital before,
who came in to have a few tests
and now can’t see where they’ll end;
and Coral in the bed by the door
who whimpered and gasped behind a screen
with nurses to and fro all night
and far too much of the day;
pallid, bewildered, nineteen.
And Mary, who will be all right
but gradually. And Alice, who may.
Whereas I stand almost intact,
giddy with freedom, not with pain.
I lift my light basket, observing
how little I needed in fact;
and move to the checkout, to the rain,
to the lights and the long street curving.
Clear is the man and of a cold life
who needn’t fear the slings and arrows;
cold is the man, and perhaps the moorish bows
will avoid him and the wolf turn tail.
*
Sitting in the crypt under bare arches
at a quite ordinary table with a neat cloth,
a glass of wine before him, ‘I’m never sure,’
he said, ‘that I’ll wake up tomorrow morning.’
Upstairs musicians were stretching their bows
for a late quartet which would also save us from nothing.
This ex-church was bombed to rubble,
rebuilt. It is not of that he was thinking.
And policemen decorate the underground stations
to protect us from the impure of heart;
the traveller must learn to suspect his neighbour,
each man his own watchdog. Nor of that.
Of a certain high felicity, perhaps,
imagining its absence; of the chances.
(If echoes fall into the likeness of music
that, like symmetry, may be accidental.)
‘Avoid archaism for its own sake –
viols, rebecks: what is important
is simply that the instruments should be able
to play the notes.’ A hard-learnt compromise.
But using what we have while we have it
seems, at times, enough or more than enough.
And here were old and newer things for our pleasure –
the sweet curves of the arches; music to come.
Which this one set before him with his own death –
far from probably imminent, not soon likely –
ticking contrapuntally like a pace-maker
inside him. Were we, then, lighter, colder?
Had we ignored a central insistent theme?
Possibly even the birds aren’t happy:
it may be that they twitter from rage or fear.
So many tones; one can’t be sure of one’s reading.
Just as one can’t quite despise Horace
on whom the dreaded tree never did quite fall;
timid enjoyer that he was, he died
in due course of something or other. And meanwhile
sang of his Lalage in public measures,
enjoyed his farm and his dinners rather more,
had as much, no doubt, as any of us to lose.
And the black cypress stalks after us all.
Neighbours lent her a tall feathery dog
to make her expedition seem natural.
She couldn’t really fancy a walk alone,
drawn though she was to the shawled whiteness,
the flung drifts of wool. She was not a walker.
Her winter pleasures were in firelit rooms –
entertaining friends with inventive dishes
or with sherry, conversation, palm-reading:
‘You’ve suffered,’ she’d say. ‘Of course, life is suffering…’
holding a wrist with her little puffy hand
older than her face. She was writing a novel.
But today there was the common smothered in snow,
blanked-out, white as meringue, the paths gone:
a few mounds of bracken spikily veiled
and the rest smooth succulence. They pocked it,
she and the dog; they wrote on it with their feet –
her suede boots, his bright flurrying paws.
It was their snow, and they took it.
That evening
the poltergeist, the switcher-on of lights
and conjuror with ashtrays, was absent.
The house lay mute. She hesitated a moment
at bedtime before the Valium bottle;
then, to be on the safe side, took her usual;
and swam into a deep snowy sleep
where a lodge (was it?) and men in fur hats,
and the galloping…and something about…
1.30 p.m.
Outside the National Gallery
a man checks bags for bombs or weapons –
not thoroughly enough: he’d have missed
a tiny hand-grenade in my make-up purse,
a cigarette packet of gelignite.
I walk in gently to Room III
not to disturb them: Piero’s angels,
serene and cheerful, whom surely nothing could frighten,
and St Michael in his red boots
armed against all comers.
Brave images. But under my heart
an explosive bubble of tenderness gathers
and I shiver before the chalky Christ:
what must we do to save
the white limbs, pale tree, trusting verticals?
Playing the old bargaining game
I juggle with prices, offer a finger
for this or that painting, a hand or an eye
for the room’s contents. What for the whole building?
And shouldn’t I jump aside if the bomb flew,
cowardly as instinct makes us?
‘Goodbye’ I tell the angels, just in case.
4 p.m.
It’s a day for pictures:
this afternoon, in the course of duty,
I open a book of black-and-white photographs,
rather smudgy, the text quaintly translated
from the Japanese: Atomic Bomb Injuries.
All the familiar shots are here:
the shadow blast-printed on to a wall,
the seared or bloated faces of children.
I am managing not to react to them.
Then this soldier, who died from merely helping,
several slow weeks afterwards.
His body is a Scarfe cartoon –
skinny trunk, enormous toes and fingers,
joints huge with lymphatic nodes.
My throat swells with tears at last.
Almost I fall into that inheritance,
long resisted and never my own doctrine,
a body I would not be part of.
I all but say it: ‘What have we done?
How shall we pay for this?’
But having a job to do I swallow
tears, guilt, these pallid secretions;
close the book; and carry it away
to answer someone’s factual enquiry.
7 p.m.
In the desert the biggest tank battle
since World War II smashes on.
My friends are not sure whether their brothers
in Israel are still alive.
All day the skies roar with jets.
And I do not write political poems.
Through my pillow, through mattress, carpet, floor and ceiling,
sounds ooze up from the room below:
footsteps, chinking crockery, hot-water pipes groaning,
the muffled clunk of the refrigerator door,
and voices. They are trying to be quiet,
my son and his friends, home late in the evening.
Tones come softly filtered through the layers of padding.
I hear the words but not what the words are,
as on my radio when the batteries are fading.
Voices are reduced to a muted music:
Andrew’s bass, his friend’s tenor, the indistinguishable
light murmurs of the girls; occasional giggling.
Surely wood and plaster retain something
in their grain of all the essences they absorb?
This house has been lived in for ninety years,
nine by us. It has heard all manner of talking.
Its porous fabric must be saturated
with words. I offer it my peaceful breathing.
These winds bully me:
I am to lie down in a ditch
quiet under the thrashing nettles
and pull the mud up to my chin.
Not that I would submit so
to one voice only;
but by the voices of these several winds
merged into a flowing fringe of tones
that swirl and comb over the hills
I am compelled.
I shall lie sound-proofed in the mud,
a huge caddis-fly larva,
a face floating upon Egyptian unguents
in a runnel at the bottom of England.
We give ten pence to the old woman
and climb through nettles to the beehive hut.
You’ve been before. You’re showing me prehistory,
ushering me into a stone cocoon.
I finger the corbelled wall and squat against it
bowing my back in submission to its curves.
The floor’s washed rock: not even a scorchmark
as trace of the once-dwellers. But they’re here,
closer than you, and trying to seduce me:
the arched stones burn against my shoulders,
my knees tingle, the cool air buzzes…
I drag my eyelids open and sleep-walk out.
‘We’re skeletons underneath’ I’ve heard you say,
looking into coffins at neat arrangements
laid out in museums. We’re skeletons.
I take the bones of your hand lightly in mine
through the dry flesh and walk unresisting,
willing to share it, over the peopled soil.