Authors: Fleur Adcock
It was the midnight train; I was tired and edgy.
The advertisement portrayed – I wrote it down – a
‘Skull-like young female, licking lips’ and I added
‘Prefer Grandma, even dead’ as she newly was.
I walked home singing one of her Irish ballads.
Death is one thing, necrophilia another.
So I climbed up that ladder in the frescoed barn –
a soft ladder, swaying and collapsing under
my feet (my hands alone hauled me into the loft) –
and found, without surprise, a decomposed lady
who drew me down to her breast, with her disengaged
armbones, saying ‘Come, my dearie, don’t be afraid,
come to me’ into a mess of sweetish decay.
It was a dream. I screamed and woke, put on the light,
dozed, woke again. For half a day I carried that
carcass in my own failing arms. Then remembered:
even the dead want to be loved for their own sake.
She was indeed my grandmother. She did not choose
to be dead and rotten. My blood too (Group A,
Rhesus negative, derived exactly from hers)
will suffer that deterioration; my much
modified version of her nose will fall away,
my longer bones collapse like hers. So let me now
apologise to my sons and their possible
children for the gruesomeness: we do not mean it.
The bee in the foxglove, the mouth on the nipple,
the hand between the thighs.
Forgive me
these procreative images.
Do you remember
that great hill outside Wellington, which we
had to climb, before they built the motorway,
to go north? The engine used to boil
in the old Chev. Straight up the road went
and tipped us over into Johnsonville.
Nothing on the way but rock and gorse, gravel-
pits, and foxgloves; and a tunnel hacked deep,
somewhere, into a cliff. Ah, my burgeoning new
country, I said (being fourteen). Yes, a steep
road to climb. But coming back was better;
a matter for some caution in a car,
but glorious and terrible on a bicycle.
Heart in my pedals, down I would roar
towards the sea; I’d go straight into it
if I didn’t brake. No time then to stare
self-consciously at New Zealand vegetation,
at the awkward landscape. I needed all my care
for making the right turn towards the city
at the hill’s base, where the paint-hoarding stood
between me and the harbour.
For ten years
that city possessed me. In time it bred
two sons for me (little pink mouths tucked
like foxglove-bells over my nipples). Yes,
in this matter Wellington and I have no
quarrel. But I think it was a barren place.
‘But look at all this beauty,’
said the hotel manager’s wife
when asked how she could bear to
live there. True: there was a fine bay,
all hills and atmosphere; white
sand, and bush down to the sea’s edge;
oyster-boats, too, and Maori
fishermen with Scottish names (she
ran off with one that autumn).
As for me, I walked on the beach;
it was too cold to swim. My
seven-year-old collected shells
and was bitten by sandflies;
my four-year-old paddled, until
a mad seagull jetted down
to jab its claws and beak into
his head. I had already
decided to leave the country.
He is my green branch growing in a far plantation.
He is my first invention.
No one can be in two places at once.
So we left Athens on the same morning.
I was in a hot railway carriage, crammed
between Serbian soldiers and peasant
women, on sticky seats, with nothing to
drink but warm mineral water.
He was
in a cabin with square windows, sailing
across the Mediterranean, fast,
to Suez.
Then I was back in London
in the tarnished summer, remembering,
as I folded his bed up, and sent the
television set away. Letters came
from Aden and Singapore, late.
He was
already in his father’s house, on the
cliff-top, where the winter storms roll across
from Kapiti Island, and the flax bends
before the wind. He could go no further.
He is my bright sea-bird on a rocky beach.
I am sitting on the step
drinking coffee and
smoking, listening to jazz.
The smoke separates
two scents: fresh paint in the house
behind me; in front,
buddleia.
The neighbours cut
back our lilac tree –
it shaded their neat garden.
The buddleia will
be next, no doubt; but bees and
all those butterflies
approve of our shaggy trees.
*
I am painting the front door
with such thick juicy
paint I could almost eat it.
People going past
with their shopping stare at my
bare legs and old shirt.
The door will be sea-green.
Our
black cat walked across
the painted step and left a
delicate paw-trail.
I swore at her and frightened
two little girls – this
street is given to children.
The other cat is younger,
white and tabby, fat,
with a hoarse voice. In summer
she sleeps all day long
in the rosebay willow-herb,
too lazy to walk
on paint.
Andrew is upstairs;
having discovered
quick-drying non-drip gloss, he
is old enough now
to paint all his furniture
tangerine and the
woodwork green; he is singing.
*
I am lying in the sun,
in the garden. Bees
dive on white clover beside
my ears. The sky is
Greek blue, with a vapour-trail
chalked right across it.
My transistor radio
talks about the moon.
*
I am floating in the sky.
Below me the house
crouches among its trees like
a cat in long grass.
I want to stroke its roof-ridge
but I think I can
already hear it purring.
Elm, laburnum, hawthorn, oak:
all the incredible leaves expand
on their dusty branches, like
Japanese paper flowers in water,
like anything one hardly believes
will really work this time; and
I am a stupefied spectator
as usual. What are they all, these
multiverdant, variously-made
soft sudden things, these leaves?
So I walk solemnly in the park
with a copy of
Let’s Look at Trees
from the children’s library,
identifying leaf-shapes and bark
while behind my back, at home,
my own garden is turning into a wood.
Before my house the pink may tree
lolls its heavy heads over mine
to grapple my hair as I come
in; at the back door I walk out
under lilac. The two elders
(I let them grow for the wine)
hang vastly over the fence, no doubt
infuriating my tidy neighbours.
In the centre the apple tree
needs pruning. And everywhere,
soaring over the garden shed,
camouflaged by roses, or snaking
up through the grass like vertical worms,
grows every size of sycamore.
Last year we attacked them; I saw
my son, so tender to ants, so sad
over dead caterpillars, hacking
at living roots as thick as his arms,
drenching the stumps with creosote.
No use: they continue to grow.
Under the grass, the ground
must be peppered with winged seeds,
meshed with a tough stringy net
of roots; and the house itself undermined
by wandering wood. Shall we see
the floorboards lifted one morning
by these indomitable weeds,
or find in the airing-cupboard
a rather pale sapling?
And if we do, will it be
worse than cracked pipes or dry rot?
Trees I can tolerate; they are why
I chose this house – for the apple tree,
elder, buddleia, lilac, may;
and outside my bedroom window, higher
every week, its leaves unfurling
pink at the twig-tips (composite
in form) the tallest sycamore.
First she made a little garden
of sorrel stalks wedged among
some yellowy-brown moss-cushions
and fenced it with ice-lolly sticks
(there were just enough); then she
set out biscuit-crumbs on a brick
for the ants; now she sits on a
deserted luggage-trolley
to watch them come for their dinner.
It’s nice here – cloudy but quite warm.
Five trains have swooshed through, and one
stopped, but at the other platform.
Later, when no one is looking,
she may climb the roof of that
low shed. Her mother is making
another telephone call (she
isn’t crying any more).
Perhaps they will stay here all day.
The three-toed sloth is the slowest creature we know
for its size. It spends its life hanging upside-down
from a branch, its baby nestling on its breast.
It never cleans itself, but lets fungus grow
on its fur. The grin it wears, like an idiot clown,
proclaims the joys of a life which is one long rest.
The three-toed sloth is content. It doesn’t care.
It moves imperceptibly, like the laziest snail
you ever saw blown up to the size of a sheep.
Disguised as a grey-green bough it dangles there
in the steamy Amazon jungle. That long-drawn wail
is its slow-motion sneeze. Then it falls asleep.
One cannot but envy such torpor. Its top speed,
when rushing to save its young, is a dramatic
fourteen feet per minute, in a race with fate.
The puzzle is this, though: how did nature breed
a race so determinedly unenergetic?
What passion ever inspired a sloth to mate?
I write in praise of the solitary act:
of not feeling a trespassing tongue
forced into one’s mouth, one’s breath
smothered, nipples crushed against the
ribcage, and that metallic tingling
in the chin set off by a certain odd nerve:
unpleasure. Just to avoid those eyes would help –
such eyes as a young girl draws life from,
listening to the vegetal
rustle within her, as his gaze
stirs polypal fronds in the obscure
sea-bed of her body, and her own eyes blur.
There is much to be said for abandoning
this no longer novel exercise –
for not ‘participating in
a total experience’ – when
one feels like the lady in Leeds who
had seen
The Sound of Music
eighty-six times;
or more, perhaps, like the school drama mistress
producing
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
for the seventh year running, with
yet another cast from 5B.
Pyramus and Thisbe are dead, but
the hole in the wall can still be troublesome.
I advise you, then, to embrace it without
encumbrance. No need to set the scene,
dress up (or undress), make speeches.
Five minutes of solitude are
enough – in the bath, or to fill
that gap between the Sunday papers and lunch.
The surface dreams are easily remembered:
I wake most often with a comforting sense
of having seen a pleasantly odd film –
nothing too outlandish or too intense;
of having, perhaps, befriended animals,
made love, swum the Channel, flown in the air
without wings, visited Tibet or Chile:
simple childish stuff. Or else the rare
recurrent horror makes its call upon me:
I dream one of my sons is lost or dead,
or that I am trapped in a tunnel underground;
but my scream is enough to recall me to my bed.
Sometimes, indeed, I congratulate myself
on the nice precision of my observation:
on having seen so vividly a certain
colour; having felt the sharp sensation
of cold water on my hands; the exact taste
of wine or peppermints. I take a pride
in finding all my senses operative
even in sleep. So, with nothing to hide,
I amble through my latest entertainment
again, in the bath or going to work,
idly amused at what the night has offered;
unless this is a day when a sick jerk
recalls to me a sudden different vision:
I see myself inspecting the vast slit
of a sagging whore; making love with a hunchbacked
hermaphrodite; eating worms or shit;
or rapt upon necrophily or incest.
And whatever loathsome images I see
are just as vivid as the pleasant others.
I flush and shudder: my God, was that me?
Did I invent so ludicrously revolting
a scene? And if so, how could I forget
until this instant? And why now remember?
Furthermore (and more disturbing yet)
are all my other forgotten dreams like these?
Do I, for hours of my innocent nights,
wallow content and charmed through verminous muck,
rollick in the embraces of such frights?
And are the comic or harmless fantasies
I wake with merely a deceiving guard,
as one might put a Hans Andersen cover
on a volume of the writings of De Sade?
Enough, enough. Bring back those easy pictures,
Tibet or antelopes, a seemly lover,
or even the black tunnel. For the rest,
I do not care to know. Replace the cover.