Authors: Sophie Hannah
Tags: #Poetry, #Anthologies (Multiple Authors), #Health & Fitness, #Sexuality
Live, alive-ho! These bugs! These bugs! Alive!
They’ve leapt between us since we flapped in slime,
jump ship, like pirates, to the brink of Time.
We’re hit. We take in water. They survive.
& here we wait for test results, pretend
to read. You:
What Car?
Me: Holub’s
Selected
which permeates my bones till I’m infected.
Does every rhyme of loins sound out the end?
If you weren’t such a bloke I’d hold your hand
uncurl it, break it open like a tight
wet waterlily bulb, there to find – stowed –
the toxic larvae of angels. I’d wind
the clocks back to that hot, barbaric night.
I’d burn them off your palm, watch them explode.
King Solomon and King David
Led merry merry lives
With many many lady friends
And many many wives;
But when old age crept up on them
With many many qualms,
King Solomon wrote the Proverbs
And King David wrote the Psalms.
Last night’s gladrags transform in daylight.
Crimson lipstick bitten from the very centre
of my mouth leaves a tide line, heart shaped.
These red shoes were never meant for treading
the long path home – kitten heels jack me up
pointing sinwards, downhill as fast as I
can possibly slide. The holes snagged in my tights gape
wide as the mouth of a shocked onlooker, as if your hands
had left prints in a repeating pattern
all over my lower half. Can they tell,
the street sweepers, delivery men and dirty-faced tramps
that I’ve been out all night, mauling hot flesh
getting intimate with an unknown lover?
This morning I walk home empty handed
nameless, and despite myself, carrying no trace of regret.
When I think of the bodies I ran from.
Throwing myself on the mercy of grass pastures and filthy mattresses.
The springs, the bedsits, the landscape miniatures.
And worst of all, the way they sewed me up like a purse
so I wouldn’t try and get out.
Or in, they couldn’t decide which.
When I think of the bad love.
The girl who lost it again and again on that patch of municipal lawn.
Hot sap running down her thighs.
The girl who held herself at arm’s length all her life.
Who couldn’t bear to look herself in the eye
let alone love.
When I think of the neglect.
The years of untended want gone to waste.
My God. I could go down on my knees and weep.
Weep! like a silent movie heroine bathed in the torchlight of pathos.
And all my starved orifices would form a chorus of sobs
and pourforth, sputtering like outside taps.
When I think of the pangs in windowless rooms.
The years of skulduggery and subterfuge.
I could swear it was someone else the whole time.
I could scream:
Make way for more!
More bad love! More neglect! More pourforth!
Odd how the seemingly maddest of men –
sheer loonies, the classically paranoid
violently possessive about their secrets,
whispered after from corners, terrified
of poison in their coffee, driven frantic
(whether for or against him) by discussion of God
peculiar, to say the least, about their mothers –
return to their gentle senses in bed.
Suddenly straightforward, they perform
with routine confidence, neither afraid
that their partner will turn and bite their balls off
nor groping under the pillow for a razor blade;
eccentric only in their conversation,
which rambles on about the meaning of a word
they used in an argument in 1969,
they leave their women grateful, relieved, and bored.
(after Verlaine)
My lovers are not literary types.
They are labourers on building sites.
They build houses and dig drains.
They do not sip champagne.
I want their strong arms to pin me to the bed.
I want them to enjoy me without romance,
simply, the way they take their beer and bread.
I want to make them hard and make them dance.
They do not own a tie or fancy shirts,
or a single suit. Their bodies have an earthy scent
or reek of cheap cologne like Brut.
Their hands are rough and thick, and elegant.
They’re not so hot at grammar, except in bed
where suddenly every word they say is correctly said.
They may not wash sometimes, but breathe me in
as if my skin were made of oxygen.
They trail a tang of sweat and stale tobacco everywhere.
Unfinished at the edges, they don’t wear underwear.
All they do is belch and fuck and hawk and fart.
They can’t tell the difference between their prick and their heart.
Her lips were round and full
And to his lap she bent;
He saw no car ahead
And when he came he went.
Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,
Old Time is still a-flying;
And this same flower that smiles today
Tomorrow will be dying.
The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun,
The higher he’s a-getting,
The sooner will his race be run,
And nearer he’s to setting.
That age is best which is the first,
When youth and blood are warmer;
But being spent, the worse, and worst
Times still succeed the former.
Then be not coy, but use your time,
And while ye may, go marry;
For having lost but once your prime,
You may forever tarry.
Lying apart now, each in a separate bed,
He with a book, keeping the light on late,
She like a girl dreaming of childhood,
All men elsewhere – it is as if they wait
Some new event: the book he holds unread,
Her eyes fixed on the shadows overhead.
Tossed up like flotsam from a former passion,
How cool they lie. They hardly ever touch,
Or if they do, it is like a confession
Of having little feeling – or too much.
Chastity faces them, a destination
For which their whole lives were a preparation.
Strangely apart, yet strangely close together,
Silence between them like a thread to hold
And not wind in. And time itself’s a feather
Touching them gently. Do they know they’re old,
These two who are my father and my mother
Whose fire from which I came, has now grown cold?
Ancient person, for whom I,
All the flattering youth defy;
Long be it e’er thou grow old,
Aching, shaking, crazy cold.
But still continue as thou art,
Ancient person of my heart.
On thy withered lips and dry,
Which like barren furrows lye;
Brooding kisses I will pour,
Shall thy youthful heat restore.
Such kind showers in autumn fall,
And a second spring recall:
Nor from thee will ever part,
Ancient person of my heart.
Thy nobler part, which but to name
In our sex would be counted shame,
By age’s frozen grasp possessed,
From his ice shall be released,
And soothed by my reviving hand,
In former warmth and vigour stand.
All a lover’s wish can reach,
For thy joy my love shall teach;
And for thy pleasure shall improve,
All that art can add to love.
Yet still I love thee without art,
Ancient person of my heart.
You whom I never loved,
You I have never touched
Live in my mind as if you proved
A thesis about other such,
Which is, that firm and tender flesh
Is medicine for an ageing man,
As if one body could refresh
Another as it never can.
The crook of age, the spring of youth,
Are equally the work of time;
What is in common is the truth
That age is age and prime is prime
And that both quickly slip away
To other hours, or none at all:
Whatever words the ghosts may say
It is the bodies take the fall.
Pretence may entertain the old,
The young may answer with a lie
But neither old nor young can hold
The same illusion till they die.
I look on you, you look on me;
For both, to speak no word is best.
I contemplate your lovely youth;
You cannot bear to think the rest.
What lips my lips have kissed, and where, and why,
I have forgotten, and what arms have lain
Under my head till morning; but the rain
Is full of ghosts tonight, that tap and sigh
Upon the glass and listen for reply,
And in my heart there stirs a quiet pain
For unremembered lads that not again
Will turn to me at midnight with a cry.
Thus in winter stands the lonely tree,
Nor knows what birds have vanished one by one,
Yet knows its boughs more silent than before:
I cannot say what loves have come and gone,
I only know that summer sang in me
A little while, that in me sings no more.
Youth and beauty have left me
a full packet of cigarettes
and this balcony. Time redecorates
my home as a reliquary.
The camera loved me once,
as everyone loves a young woman
of spirit who toys with men
and uses her natural elegance
to get what she wants. Siren
or ingénue, whatever they asked of me
I exuded ‘a carefree, naive sexuality’,
the critics said. Dominique, is that Dorian
at the door? My official biographer
promised to swing by after church
with more questions. He isn’t much
to look at, but he’s my last admirer.
Mick Jagger’s penis is pleased to meet you.
Mick Jagger’s penis is the John Lennon’s penis
of penises. Also, the Steven Tyler scarf collection
of penises, the David Lee Roth midair crotch thrust,
the Gene Simmons codpiece, the Axl Rose attitude of penises.
This is a lot of pressure for a penis,
big shoes for a penis to fill. Mick Jagger’s penis
doesn’t ask for much, these days. Mick Jagger’s penis
is strongly influenced by the blues and knows
whom this song is about. There are two versions
of Mick Jagger’s penis: the one the world sees
and the one that lies awake at night
and worries it has let someone down.
Sometimes it wants to be remembered,
to leave its mark on the world, it wants
to be more than footnote, punchline, punching bag.
Sometimes it just wants to be held.
It grows weary of everything having two meanings.
If you ask Mick Jagger’s penis about its dreams,
it will tell you about a certain lightning storm
over a certain lake – which means
nothing more or nothing less than what it was:
the dark water, the sky splitting open.
If you are lucky
you will carry one night with you
for the rest of your life,
a night like no other.
You won’t see it coming.
Forget the day, the year.
It will arrive uninvoked,
an astrological anomaly.
You will remember
how every cell in your body
knew him, this stranger,
how you held your breath,
the way you searched his face.
This is how such evenings begin.
And you will be real in your skin,
bone and sinew; the way you always thought
you could be. Effortlessly.
This is how you will fit together.
His parted lips between your thighs,
your half-lit nipples darkening,
the hot-breathed arrival of desire,
the frenzied coupling
as you opened soundlessly
and the world flooded into you.
In the morning, maybe,
soon after sunrise
you will walk barefoot above a waterfall in the forest,
light-headed with the smell of sex,
laughing in your déshabillé.
You will carry
the music of this memory with you;
and from time to time,
in the small, withered hours,
your body will sing its remembering.