THE LOCAL TRAIN LINE
You can go backwards to Christmas on a train
and often I would, and sometimes doze.
Squirrels can fly if perceived in the caravan
of trees sailing past through railway train windows -
windows that taste like an old copper coin.
I remember taking the train on schooldays
from the local village’s request stop station
to the industrial town they call Barrow-in-Furness,
round the estuary which Norman Nicholson
mapped in a poetry that remains matchless.
So many birds can be observed when on
that journey, already feeling semi-famous.
The gentle arrhythmia cajoles you into a lull,
the sound of the wreckety wreckety wreck.
When you get on it’s empty, but it is full
at the end of the journey like a swollen beck.
I would already smoke pollen at school.
At the end of the schoolday I would travel back.
Now as I write I hear the train toot its horn.
I won’t get on it anymore, not since COVID,
and since becoming so paranoid within
that I prefer to not venture all the way outside,
into the town, that is. So here I remain,
survivor of a pathetic attempt at suicide.
Tiny engines may rev up on pellucid glass,
augmenting the sense of cosiness you feel,
when heading for school, for an A-level class
about the meaning of Caliban and Ariel.
The Sixth Form girls would giggle at me as
I sat there reading a book of Robert Lowell.
Going to the private school meant I never
cheered up and joined in with the human race.
If there is a difference between being clever
and having what they call moral compass,
we should all sit together, and endeavour
to unite while keeping intact our difference.
The telegraph poles went flowing past.
Counting them I never picked a favourite.
I’d hope for the flow of the day to go fast.
If the weather was rubbish I’d get used to it.
Achieving my dream of being the best essayist
was easier when I put my sober mind to it.
A boy I was, mewling and puking to school,
feigning High Indifference when there.
Back then the currency was in being cool.
Exciting was the license to scent the air.
The music I collected was the sacred pool.
I was in love with a girl with brown hair.
Sometimes we’d bunk off and go walking
in a kind of pantheistic or animistic trance,
or sleep in caves; or stay up talking -
but never once did she see me dance!
To Amsterdam and Paris we went gallivanting -
to see the museums – to not waste the chance.
At the end of school I went down south
and broke off the relationship in doing so,
started to let ecstasy pills into my mouth,
worked some boring jobs and went with the flow.
The train was a gullet, gulping back and forth.
Sometimes we’d travel under a rainbow.
TO REDEEM A DREAM OF FREEDOM
Once again it falls on me to be the one to say
that biding my time from here to eternity
to see if the lawn has sprung a flower
watch out for the Honda lawnmower:
for I mow the grass where the Plough aligns.
I try to keep to neat, symmetrical lines.
When the first, fresh, redolent, enervating
scent of change begins its fermenting
on the ego-loss breeze it is my duty
to the Natural World and all her beauty
to mow the grass – a foot high with neglect,
it was today, but owing to my respect
it’s been cut down, mowed over. Well,
I love the smell of petrol more than the smell
of a fresh Christmas tree, and to do
something with my life is also new
reward in itself. It’s not like I get paid -
but it redeems a dream of freedom in my head.
Now when my mother looks out the glass,
she doesn’t have to look at foot-high grass,
but sees her plants in all their little pots,
their little de-institutionalisations and bets,
and the dog rolls around like he’s found
Paradise down there on the ground.
0
RANDOM ACCESS CO-IMAGINATION
Simon says The River Goyt
might become the Styx in Heaven.
Will says something about who you
think of touching yourself in the shower.
I say maybe all I need is a length,
need is a length of metal chain.
Dave says it’s rude to repeat
the shift of feet down the corridor.
Raymond says let’s have one more
crumble from your dad’s pollen.
Jesus sits at the right hand
of the Lord God our Father.
Paul asks wear an emotional
condom before you f**k my mind, man.
Mother says imagination is a
muscle and language a creature.
Hal says I know you spoke
against September 11th in 2000.
Mark knows that I said a clock
is only as fast as a cheetah.
Andy says “I know the chords
to this tune by Bob Dylan.”
Dad said Dylan was religion,
to listen to on Sunday when younger.
Mandy says the main attraction
of drug-taking is the connections
you make with other people -
but I for one will just have butter.
Bex says I'm right it's impossible
to remember a new yellow line.
Mother says I must remember
when I go out to shut the door.
Dexter says I was right that
my dad used to smuggle pollen
and that the art smuggling story
was just an elaborate cover.
Mark says something like there
is no virtue beyond fashion -
or was it no vice I cannot
quite remember anymore.
THE
MYSTIC VISIONARY
(For
Robert)
The
bond between a mother and her son
should
be one of unconditional love,
not
limited by language barriers,
different
appellations for the light.
Under
the moon, I love my mother
as
I loved my father too, whom
it
would seem would deem it jolly good,
the
food we ate in Italy recently.
Orange
is the sun when it sets there too and
then
in the clouds Heaven’s bars
sell
upturned jars of sunset, making
you
claim that even plastic can grow.
The
colour of a red toy car with my
fingerprints
on it could then seem to be “detuned”
like
a guitar string, and counting numbers
seem
steps down into the earth...
I
love the bones my mother grew
inside
her warm womb long ago now,
before
the trauma of birth separated us,
and
I
face
the music, dreaming big.
Wow!
I can’t believe the things I’ve
touched
with my own fingers
but
my
fingers
have crashed, I type, and my
mad,
crashed fingers have connected.
SQUALIA
These
are excellent: Squalia, (as opposed to Qualia),
t
hey
could seem the status life details of a katabatic
descent
towards Rock Bottom: a bed in a shed;
taking
notes on receipts, Rizla papers, train tickets,
the
backs of packets; wearing naff tracky bottoms
lifted
from ASDA and splattered with white
emulsion
paint from doing up the band’s house
like
a badge of honour; eating discarded
Danish
pastries
from
the Co-op supermarket bin at the fringes of
society.
S
till,
S
qualia
could also be revamped with intensity.
For
example, what is the street-name for Ecstasy
when
the band detune the guitars all the way down?
F
sharp minor is the answer and the name of a number
by
the band. It being recorded
on
state-of-the-art,
binaural
earphones,
earphones
I tell you, with
tiny
mics implanted inside, on that very weird album on
which
I said I would plug my senses in the mains,
may
be the reason I now hear soooo many voices.
They
may be Squalia re-defined as squatters,
people
who pay no rent or electricity as I didn’t
back
in the days of said band. I was kicked out
of
the band for weird behaviour; for instance I came
home
from the pub, intoxicated on a cocktail
of
noxious toxins of deleterious self-derision and
launched
into a speech in an imaginary language
no-one
could understand, keeping it up for half
an
hour, ad-libbing it, impromptu while rolling
around
like in a neo-shamanic ritual on the ground.
Just
when they thought they had lost me forever,
I
went and had sex with the
shed’s
cold,
concrete floor
on
Ecstasy, and it wasn’t long before I was booted
out
of my own band. The Flood we were called
and
were a Cambridge-based jam band who only
recorded
on
binaural earphones. By the time
I
got home to the north I was angry and walked
up
the fell, ranting in the cassette tape wind. I
did
not know who had phoned my mum, concerned,
and
had
her
collect me
.
I still don’t, but no longer
care,
for all I embarked on a program of meditation,
detox,
dreamwork, reading and exercise, and
despite
a
mental illness kicking in
,
still
got
a
good degree as if I had wilfully walked away
from
music to pursue poetry and
become
a graduate
.
-
I
conceived of Lancaster
U
niversity
as a type of word-guitar
made
by Fender
whereupon
the
voices came
to
me.
They
said
among
many other things that I should
“
lose
the book or the guitar”
which
is a very difficult
decision
to make and one I still have not made absolutely.
WHEN F LEFT THE ALPHABET
“When F left the alphabet albeit temporarily
I got the results of my test, proving
I’m autistic, an high-functioning autist.
My brother then set up a recording studio
in the posh, coffee-cake dining room, whose
digital buttons and layers and codes even
entered my dreams at night after a while.
I recorded many numbers old and new...
when Baxter the dog walks on the laptop
funny things come out, like the names
of electronica numbers; and the sound
of typing can be used as percussion in
non-metred Sound Art, I also found.
There was even brief relief from voices,
‘onjects,’ quavers, syllabubbles, sonic
machinations at the periphery of sound,
while I faced the music, while I recorded.
Still, I came back to the silence of the
blank page where I might hang life like a coat
in a primary school cloak room, just because.
I wanted to say any word can be spelled in
any way, any guitar solo played any way,
that all discipline boundaries have dissolved,
all the subjects become one thing, life,
whereupon one might turn to philosophy…
but now everything has returned to normal and
I am glad for while F had left the alphabet
there was no longer any word for Freedom.
So to try and write in wrinkled and crinkly
Christmas wrapping paper becomes a good
game all over again, and food for thought
a priority, and the translation of feelings.”
HALF
OF IT
A
river ru
nn
i
n
g
through variegated ages of rock
seems
to
contain
many ages at once
like
the
books
groa
n
i
n
g
o
n
the
shelf.
A
rock star meanwhile can change costume
many
times during a
n
exciting
performance
and
still somehow
re
sound
as
himself.
It
isn’t the river or the rock star,
changing
gear,
that so amazes the soul,
though,
but
something more
globular
and
holistic.
The
Rolling Stones became The Strolling Bones;
and
the
n
the
art teacher said to
put
more
pink
in the shadow to make it more realistic.
MY BROTHER’S POEM
I didn’t script the net (and cloud) at seven,
try the maths for the new colour as a skin cell,
separate the pollen from its very name;
didn’t deal with Jim Morrison twice as well.
I didn’t attain the face of stars,
forewarn people of September 11th
in 2000, prophesy the Plough’s
alignment, the God Particle from looking
at dust in a late ray of light angling
in nor get my future tutor-to-be’s
scientific paper just right as an
ideal for a book I might write
before I had even gone and met him.
I didn’t pen the highest-marked A-
level examination essay in the nation.
I didn’t have many arcane musical
experiments on the go all at the same time:
the effervescent mobile, the healing
of the tape that was cut and stuck together
in the flimsy reel, the recording
on binaural earphones, the tattooing
of Piper At The Gates of Dawn. I didn’t
host the alignment of The Plough and
the oldest fell Black Combe upon
Mr. Obama’s democratic election.
I didn’t attest to large-scale skywriting,
find the pint glass exploding from
thin air in the capital to be but a piece
of pollen in the general pollen count.
I didn’t build the Tower, work at a
numinous, purple-bleeding screen.
I didn’t, upon the loss of my father,
make the discovery of a sheet of
paper that bloomed or even grew
pictures probably depicting the lyric of a song
I wrote with my own doing hand.
I didn’t falsify the Nirvana barcode, then;
didn’t do whatever it took to attain
visual radio, broadcasting dreams,
dreams that billow like a weeping
willow in the wind, and swirl in purple,
digital swathes about the head
of the deranged seer; and come down.
I don’t think the “gestation chamber”
T. S. Eliot writes of in which the poem’s
“dark embryo” grows has now become
an inbox to empty in the Digital Age.
I don’t find it hard to have my story known.
I don’t hope that through some kind of
irony, some kind of ironic self-
distance, I’ve finally cracked it.
TO THE BROS IN THE DEN IN THE WOODS
I imagine now telling the bros in the den
in the woods my theory about the chain
of dark or even anti-evolution, that says
James Joyce, who also saw new creatures,
writing Ulysses is the reason why Ted
saw a monster in the river in childhood
who in turn wrote The Hawk In The Rain
which is then the reason Jim Morrison
saw winged serpents in the desert on acid,
whom we know is never quite flaccid,
and his writing The Lords And The New
Creatures is then why I saw not one but two
which I shall not delve into quite yet
but which I shall never again clean forget -
the bros in the den in the woods might well
fall in with my scoffed at, empurpled Hell -
and with freed minds start to write poetry
to read out under the fallen down tree
in amidst the empty beer cans and ends
of cigarettes dumped there by their friends -
but what their fair maiden female companion
would make of the chain of dark evolution
could be that it's a bundle of fairy tales
unlike the crawling of actual snails
whereas I know the whole thing to be real -
and if I could but show you how I feel -
would have you convinced that I'm right
but not well in the head, at least not quite -
which leaves me standing like a tall tree
in the wood where we used to read our poetry
which did, back when we were young,
and getting a foot on the ladder's first rung.
DEFACED
It’s actually a rather saddening story for now
I’d be in and out of hospital for the rest of my days,
still my father thought it hilarious, how,
when I was first hospitalised I ran away,
on my first escorted walk in the grounds,
through a field and across a busy motorway
and up a serpentine trainline to the station
from which I made it to Scotland by train,
thinking there’d be a different jurisdiction -
but oh how my athletic efforts were in vain!
The cops found me wandering that other nation
and took me south of the border again!
I’d been put under a curse unbeknownst to me...
forced to abide by the stringent rules,
I sat back in hospital writing poetry
in a waiter’s pad, inventing brave new schools,
smoking on the banks of the Styx of sweet tea,
calling the conspiracy of doctors fools!
I scored a question mark on the musical scales
in my writing, in that place so clean,
such a sterile-surfaced Hell, run by females,
while Rachel’s party far away on the green
summit of Parliament Hill went down with pale ales
and left me to dream of the space in-between.
I’ve got a degree since then. My feeling is
that the ill are capable of increased lucidity
but I rue the new remit: not to dream with open eyes,
nor await the future with rapt uncertainty,
not to plug my senses in the mains, but de-stigmatise
mental illness. It doesn’t come naturally.
TEACHING MY SISTER THE SILENT ALPHABET
In bed, at night, have you ever reached the point
where word and muscle meet – where you
attempt to think in words without moving
a muscle in your mouth and stumble
upon the secret, white, silent alphabet?
There are certain letters, certain sounds
you simply cannot think without
a twitch from your mouth muscles -
so you play dead. You lie there and
try and underwrite the thoughts…
some graphemes, phonemes, plosives
and fricatives are possible in silent,
white and secret thought alone but
no utterance seems completely pronounced.
The silent alphabet thus has several letters
missing; and by dawn you might still
be lying there, awake, trying and trying
to think the word “whisky” without
a movement of the tongue. It can
be done but is found further in
the mind, where hands can not go.
That’s why seeing in the dark is so tough.
THE LADDER TO THE HAYLOFT
That a clock is only as fast as a cheetah,
running round and round on the stones
seems to be a young kid’s scientific finding.
That a clock is only as fast as a wounded
cheetah, struggling with fifteen balls in
the air, seems more artistic, subjective too.
That oceans smile with liquid eyes and fill
themselves with rain could be hypertext,
hypertext of Verlaine’s famous credo.
That I. T. may stand for Instant Travel too
could be nothing but a bone-idle pipe dream,
dreamed up on pot at a computer screen.
That Lucy in the soul with demons may
be an actual substance is almost chemistry,
almost musicology; and then I’m gone.
That Portability is the Apotheosis of Form
could be nothing but the modern narrative,
and apply across the board when you’re away.
That if flower-press ending on cannabis
could = a dialysis a love poem hoping
to impress poor Flora could = more a motor
seems to be an aesthetic anti-system
and satisfies the desire for something
like the colours of the vowels in English.
That the effect of acid and the effect of acid-rain
on an imaginary species should = the same,
nothing, is not necessarily true if there
can be no more proof of something being
real than saying it was imagined, which
seems both Blake-like and Cartesian too.
That the effect of global warming on the
unicorn is a postmodern id is eco-poetic,
eco-poetry being all about an awareness.
That it’s impossible to remember a new
yellow line, under the madding sun, could
be the Light-speed Law of Neuroplasticity.
That love is the hope the heart literally
needs in order for it to survive without
which it can stop is a stance before life.
That Duff is H suspended in deafness
could be history as much as anything else,
even ‘horse’ or ‘how about the housework?’
That Dog = pi times MC squared could be
the equation for a power-cut at the foot of
Black Combe, three miles from Millom, or
like plugging the senses in the mains; and
that O is the key of the babbling unicorn
is more musical Nature poetry again. Lastly,
that fire’s effect on fire could = nothing
minus nothing could be nothing but mere
speculation and conjecture; or even Nirvana.
Then the Problem 1 in that Popperian,
epistemological sense is how to get down
again, safely, before the wind topples you over.
And so I have invented Backward Liquid
Maths, for my brother and I to share,
and I hope for each a peach in the wheel.
LOOKING CLEARLY AT MY SADNESS
It goes much faster does a dying animal;
which only reminds me grief does not account
for the kitchen clock’s tick tock panning, bilateral
and moving through the room with no scent
like a Disney animation clock. And so I see
my sadness clearly and sing my heart’s song.
We remediate the immediate predicament with tea.
We dream of a kingdom where nothing’s wrong.
A crow is squawking on a tree in the garden.
Crows, dogs, horses, trees, these are our friends.
To Nature I turn for solace, her truant compensation
while a lonely winter’s new fag-end burns.
Grey like a pencil is the new day dawning
here at the foot of the Lakeland’s oldest fell,
grey like a rabbit, full of puddles blinking,
templates in The Periodic Table starting to swell…
day is an abeyance that dissimulates the vacancy
of fish-eyes sipped on. Monastic mist
flies across the fell. Everything is so watery.
You have to live here and now, not in the past.
I dreamed that we went swimming in eyewash.
Then I ate a breakfast of every snooker ball colour.
To trollop I turned, then to niceness, then balderdash.
As for the poet’s role, nothing could be duller.
A FACT ON TIME
I know a fact on Time,
but not if it will last:
if we could build a time machine
that equalled light speed,
we could only go back
to resolve the past,
not into the future,
for that has not yet happened.
That was where I was at
back when I was ten.
The science man came
to talk to us at school.
Though I was a poet,
was a poet even then,
I liked the science man,
I thought that he was cool.
From dinosaurs to lightspeed
he showed us the way,
from fossils to the future,
we were instructed,
and everyone paid
special attention that day,
that day that is a fossil
where our futures were constructed.
THE EMOTIONAL CONDOM OF THE WORLD
I heard we grew our great brains by eating meat
and, needing to spread information about it,
about farming, hunting, killing, eating things
developed words for birds that sing with their wings...
now, the pre-verbal, the thought-pattern, translated
into words, via the mechanics of meaning, is diluted.
Language is the emotional condom of the world,
into which we are all so traumatically hurled.
One day we may learn to eat language, but for now
I’ll settle for the rump of the local farmer’s cow.
CONFESSIONAL POEM
I still think of you, all these years on,
from all those years we had. You
used to make us sleep with the light
on and I still do – for it feels like
switching that switch will flush
the past down the drain. That’s where
years of writing went when at the end
of our time together, you said “I don’t
want to be in it.” So I could only bin it.
All those times we went off exploring
just “to look at trees,” as you put it -
on the premise that “there should
still be room for Nature in the Future...”
I remember that I did document a
lot of it - but it’s gone. There were
inward journeys too, like a poem is the
opposite of a bus ticket - and I remember
when we drove into the Lakes from
some other place and I wrote down
every sign along the way for a poem -
how semantics is a road sign not a place!
Well, that too is gone – all the love
poems gone - and there were, well, poems
born of recreational drug use for
the sake of literary experiment, and it’s
all gone - under Gondwanaland like
the pollen, under the green hill like
the ecstasy pill. For it was all for you,
and you are no longer in my new life.
There was even one about the neo-London
skyline as a part of the Tube service,
but I was with you when I wrote it
so it too is gone. Even the dreamwork
diary I kept won’t work with you gone.
At least some of the melodies remain;
but I’m too old to make it as a pop star,
prance round in a vapid pose suitable
for the rebellion of youth – no, it is
as a poet that I wish to leave my sting.
It seems unfair that I was faithful, and
it’s all my work that’s now destroyed, but
I suppose it could be worse: I could have
grown homosexual through the onslaught.
Maybe I did and just don’t know it yet.
LONDON FLASHBACK
London is a craven haven for corrupting taste.
Police motorbikes were being chased by the waste.
I spent a year down there after my degree -
even slept rough – but didn’t feel that free.
The riots were lootings: Christmas on earth
didn’t follow on in the town of my birth.
I busked for next to nothing, saw old friends
but abandoned ship – my each adventure tends
to me crawling home, puking, apologising profusely
to inward grace – senses broken loosely -
and now I sit sipping tea at the foot of the fell,
in a large country house not ready to sell.
There’s a beck in the back and we’re agreed
I am even allowed to write of it if I need -
no Poetry Police who have never read any
poetry will stop me, although not for a penny
I have worked for them… and I cast my mind back
to the daughters of London. The Plough and Black
Combe had aligned by the time I went down.
I lived in the East, it was like an undertown.
I drifted and loafed and smoked too much.
A Londoner by birth, I still am one as such -
but no longer hang with the cutting edge crowd -
I guess they wander lonely inside the cloud!
And no I didn’t pull when I was on holiday,
except a gay experience, though I walked away...
and soon had a dream bigger than a dream,
for which the gnomic nomenclature is “drum,”
characterised by cosmic freedom, bounding
in circles in space. Already daggers of lightning
in the storm were part of a God Simulation;
and I woke feeling cleansed, with re-aligned perception.
Still, back to the sticks, I came by rattling train
unsure if I will ever make it down there again.
A REALIST VISION OF WINTER
If winter has her compensations,
they might be found in the rosy cheek
of the woman waiting at the station’s
tentative platform in the week;
in a layer of frost crisp underfoot;
in the breath making tortuous, iron
statues in the emaciated light;
in the whole gulp of white sun
going blind behind a thorny tree,
splintering into a thousand shards
like a coruscation of divinity;
in staying in and playing cards
beside a roaring sitting room fire;
in chimney smoke against a canvas-sky;
in a little sprinkling of icing sugar
on the tops of fells as we drive by…
soup and hearty stews as well.
If Christmas has become a mad, red
rush of consumerism, such detail
cannot be bought, so I’m not sad -
sad to see the wintry trees all bare,
sad the days are dark and short.
There is no cause for dark despair
when winter’s visions can’t be bought.
BREAKFAST
Breakfast today was two fried eggs, sunny side up,
on toast left to cool slightly so the yellow butter
didn’t break the surface, with a pink-rimmed cup
containing black coffee with a lump of brown sugar,
plus streaky bacon turned in the dark-blue AGA
and dipped in red sauce, all on a new, milk-white
plate with green rim, which, when eating was over,
and I was quench’d and sated, feeling alright,
I left to soak in soapy bubbles in the kitchen sink.
I belched quite crudely then, which was my food
popping up to say ‘hello,’ and drank of my drink,
the coffee from its pot, coffee which can be renewed,
and, grateful for plenitude, felt somewhat satisfied,
and
took my leisure to the beautiful world outside.
A CONTRAPTION MADE OF WORDS FOR MAKING YOUR OWN EMOTION IN LIFE
What I want could be a contraption
(made of words) for making
your own emotion in life. You do this.
You make your own emotion.
It could be pellucid as a glass phial,
or mystical as an inscape of wings.
I am not fussy, nor think this
reductive dichotomy too meaningful.
What I get instead of what I want,
yes, is to be the neo-Rimbaud
whom it would seem has now bought
and sold a share in silence, white.
The headspace I have been through
is the most interesting in terms
of timbre tenor tone texture tense
timing tensility tenderness since I’ve
dreamed of a forbidden fifth
brain wave category, off the map, knowing
brain waves are angels here and
there are said to be only four types.
At the top of a mountain in a dream
in Italy I saw the contraption around
which we had gathered collapse
and transmit its emotive impact.
I would say it was like a child bursting
into tears, when tears break forth from their
tiny, blue chains and shatter from
your eyes but it was happiness.
The sunset was putting its giant
spliff out in the sea in the background
as the poets stood atop the Italian mnt
regarding the collapse of the contraption.
It’s possible in dreams to make it across
the ocean using only a contraption
you dream up as you go along -
just jump off the cliff like a lemming.
SIX CHILDHOOD MEMORIES
1
When I was a kid and we had two houses,
one in London, one in the Lakes,
we were often found driving up or down
the motorway between them; and
I would be looking at the derelict barns
on the side of the motorway, in
fields, and imagining a nomadic
existence. It seemed to me that
a derelict barn would be enough.
2
On the motorway, I now recall,
I used to imagine snagging my foreskin
on the barbed wire fence as
we sped off at seventy miles an hour.
I guess it was like stretching honesty
to it elastic utmost and further,
pointing the moment to its crisis,
a mixture of cartoons and chewing gum.
3
The only time I ever questioned
my brother’s intelligence as a kid
was when grand-dad asked us
“how many beans make five?”
and my brother said “I don’t know.”
I wondered how he had escaped.
4
As a kid I used to picture
a bouncing ball in my head at night
which would only bounce when I said
stop, and only stop when I said
bounce, so only through inverse
logic could I control it. Every
night I would check it was there.
5
I remember also as a child, I used to
repeat the word ‘kangaroo’
over and again in my head
until it went numb, emptied
itself of meaning, hopped off
to become the mad, kangaroo king,
down at the bottom of my ex
English-teaching granny’s garden.
6
For some unknown reason, when
the school bus used to go past
a certain farm contiguous to
the school I used to sit there asking
myself if the farm had a secret
underground lab where unsound
experiments were conducted on animals.
I
never got to find out before I left.
LINES
IN THE LITTLE BEDROOM
Earth
bounds in circles round the sun.
Breath
goes in and out like a tide.
Death
sells records to the
young
and
impressionable
.
Youth
is wasted on the young
they
say
.
Teeth
are meant for
chewing
meat
.
Truth
probably
hurts
less than cliché now.
Birth
hurts like trauma for
all
concerned.
Dearth
means a scarcity or lack of something.
Darth
as in Vader is Luke Skywalker’s
father
.
North
is the rest of
T
he
Lakes, then Scotland.
Mirth
is my feeling to be released.
Moth
wears an off-white wedding dress.
Worth
waits for ladies
to
cross
the road.
Bath
is
not
where
Jim Morrison died.
Light
changes the key in the bathroom.
Beth
died in the bath, a true tragedy.
South
is where I originate but not reside.
Mouth
to mouth means resuscitation.
Math
is American slang for mathematics.
Sloth
is
my
frame as opposed to
cowardice.
Broth
is good to heat and eat in winter.
Wrath
is another one of the Seven Deadly Sins.
Path
through the grass leads to the greenhouse.
Plath
is a poetess of egoism
therefore
minor.
Plinth
is a p
latform
supporting a
statue
.
Month
is a disciple of Jesus Christ.
Wraith
is a
flame-point
demon, screaming, lithe.
Faith
is the right to approval by the supernatural.
Froth
is the river at the broken-green-beer-bottle-corners.
Fourth
in the Premier League are Newcastle United.
Water
should come free from the Tap.
Myth
is made by
any
re-namer
of reality.
With
me is the opposite of without me.
Vermouth
is generally drunk with gin.
Absinth
makes the heart grow stronger,
actually
.
Cloth
is laid down on the kitchen table.
Labyrinth,
I
think the inner
ear
is
a labyrinth,
yes
.
“
Mammoth”
could describe the great, hulking universe.
Growth
begins in
S
pring
with gilly
flowers
.
Pith
is the essence and gist of something.
Strength
becomes less important when you’re wise.
Underneath
the bridge the Pooh-sticks went.
Wordsmith
after wordsmith
walked
on the wall.
They
deem it I am the butt of the joke.
Wreath
after
wreath is a roundabout-picnic.
Both
of
our heads are left with tonsures.
Loath
to control things, I just let go.
ON
THE ROAD IN ENGLAND
Why
is this lane stopping and starting?
S
topping
and starting uses more fuel than
the
blank amnesia of Nirvana, the extinction
of
consciousness, and we are travelling south,
a
ll
that queue, all that congestion,
(you
see I’m in the car), and
not
a single person parking,
so
we seem to work in shifts,
and
the road opens up, clear
of
other traffic, and the car
accelerates,
and the wall
of
Maya
now
falls
down.
Imagine
graffiti on the wall
of
Maya (whom it seems is
Sanskrit
for Goddess of Illusion.
)
-
I’ve
heard of graffiti on the
keel
of The Drunken Boat.
Also
on
the
wall going round
the
edge of the universe. But not
on
the wall of Maya. I don’t know why
I
bought my computer, unless to slink
off
alone and have a private moment.
We
are only going for five days.
The
automated conveyor belt
of
poesis still flows and
so
it goes and so it grows.
T
HE
MIDNIGHT RAINBOW
M
y
father
was n
ot
a retired assassin
which
he kept
secret
from
us,
his
own kin;
the
Revolution
never
thrust a big mistake
on
me in the wood
for
that
would be sick;
I
was not made to see things which
no-one
should and Nature’s no bitch;
m
y
lover
never slept with
my
buddy
Paul
which
is not the sickest thing of all;
they
never took the Towers down
because
of the verse of Jim Morrison;
I
never was placed under a curse
and
nothing’s really mending worse;
the
dog has not just
we
ed
in my bed
and
I
do not wish that I was dead;
in
fact the midnight rainbow shines
and
the toilet flushes with fine wines;
I
definitely got to sleep with whom
I
wanted back in the land of gloom;
my
brain has not come under attack
from
acid flashbacks trying to flashback;
I’d
really mind if they emptied space
of
the human form without a trace;
the
disappointment which I feel
is
not the appearance of an electric eel
;
my
best ideas were not all stolen;
the
front for my art
should
never
be
pollen;
I
do not hear the myriad of voices
cutting
down on my existential choices;
it’s
not the case that what can happen to you
may
not just be naff but sick too;
desperate
for sex with a dream full of ladies
I
never had to loot wings from Hades;
so
you see I may have it all wrong
and
can’t commit to literal things in song;
the
sound of sirens is not
heard
near,
even
if only brought on by
T
he
F
ear;
a
love I’d need to blow all this away
never
would
tell
me actually I’m gay:
how
dare you treat a human being like this?
T
he
midnight rainbow mixes blood and piss.
Through
it we escape from chronic pain,
or
not as the case may seem to be again.
BAT
A bat just appeared in the dining room
as I lay there one night thinking of you.
It flew around, encircling the gloom
and I asked my mother what to do.
She said to get the window open
but I remember Bob’s son’s Christening -
we couldn’t open the window then -
unscrew the bolt that needs unfastening.
So my mother got my other brother down,
told me that I was always bad news -
and my brother took up pliers, to get undone
the too-tightly fastened up screws.
The bat meanwhile flew around
and around, encircling the stale air,
frightening us down on the ground -
and the way it just happened to appear!
It could’ve got down the chimney I suppose,
but it’s not the only possibility.
Bats don’t spontaneously self-organise
like a Strange Attractor from Chaos Theory
but from where it came I do not know
and think of the woods where once I stood
being good and how plastic can grow,
and all that light, evening jazz from childhood…
my bro got the window open with pliers,
even though bats are not dangerous,
because as much as bats are not liars,
we still don’t want one living with us!
We propped the window ajar and I
took my laptop, Vape pen, earphones
and vacated the room, where I used to lie
dreaming of you, here at Cumpstones.
It’s still flying around in there, has not
found its way out of the window so
I’ll have to sleep in the attic, like a bat,
for there were many in the locked attic long ago…
I’d say if the house where the Plough aligns
is cursed then it affects everyone in turn,
but that would be boring, just lines
to elongate this little, midnight yarn.
When there were many in the locked attic,
they escaped through a tiny, little hole
when dad (who slept through radio static)
installed central heating, and even soul.
Now we must wait for this little bat
to be free too, to be out there in the Night,
and it might take a little while longer yet
because
of course a bat is devoid
of
sight!
LIVING
IN THE LAKES
Living
in the Lakes I am often struck
by
the sensation that life
is
going on within the pages
of
The
Lords And The New Creatures.
It
could be just a slant of light
that
gives the game away,
the
remnant evanescence behind the fell
when
the sun has set and the fell darkened.
It’s
either that or Nirvana
Unplugged
In New York.
For
that I think of rivers,
such
as the River Esk to the north.
In
the summertime, we like to go
outdoor
swimming in the Esk.
Today
the weather has cooled
so
it is not a good time to go.
So
I could speak of a “storied” world,
a
mythographic universe intact,
an
infradiegetic existence
saturated
with inter-textuality,
or
I could talk of sheep and cows,
the
way the rain falls at a slant,
the
green-ness of the grass,
and
all of Nature’s abundance.
It
is a pretty place to live,
which
Jim Morrison himself
intended
to visit on one of his trips,
but
never got round to in the end.
The
fell overlooks with its bald,
blank
forehead. Driving from town
it
appears a great, slumbering
diplodocus
come to fat and die
by
the Irish Sea; but nearer
the
foot you see it could be Buddha,
Buddha
levitating.
Walking
up
could be Western meditation...
but
if you mention the slow
ascent
up flat, gradual paths,
I
think more of a bullet to the top
of
a telegraph pole, or even the kettle
that
rises to its silent scream,
its
steam Ariel returning on Caliban’s
chain.
No, I have not been up
the
fell for a long time now; so
it’s
like I am growing into one
of
the locals! But to the fleeting,
evanescent
backdrop of dying light
behind
the darkened fell at perfumed sunset
I
often turn, stare until life grows
detached,
naked, until I remember
how
weird everything is, how
mysterious
and magical the universe.
WAKING
AT MIDNIGHT
It’s
not nice waking at midnight when you’re me:
dead
to the world on Western medication,
you
look the Night in the eye and find
the
world might’ve quietly passed you by.
There
might be a snake on the patio too.
Then
again it could be your imagination
grow
n
over-wrought, inspecting shadows.
Still
it’s safer to stay in than go out.
The
moon is a drunkard above the yew tree.
You
see this from the kitchen window.
Telly
through the wall leaks in
from
another room:
it’s
where
the
lion from the heart of Poem
Records
originates,
when you’re a child,
listening
in to telly through the wall, in
the
inner
city,
hearing its
whiskers
dipped in News.
But
childhood is gone, as seems the city -
here
we have a pretty place of artistic retreat.
The
loneliness rots in the whole, human heart.
At
least in reading the voices go away.
I’m
on
The
Basic Writings of Bertrand Russell
.
BECK
VARIATION
Standing
in my wellies beside the beck,
I
note its
most
mellifluous
applause,
how
it falls two feet
into
a sound as sweet
as
a kettle drum’s metal petals
of
silver bliss that blossom
on
a carnival’s street.
Further
to distil the air in the mind,
I
wait, to obviate not titivate,
and
notice the green kingdom all around.
A
squadron of nettles guards the wild.
It
must be so different
from
living
in
Norman Nicholson’s Millom,
down
the end of Rottington Road.
A
lone bird pipes a bar in a tree.
Then
I notice I need to pee.
So
into the heavenly nectar I do.
H20
might stand for Hypothalamus Tattoo.
SPYING A WILD DEER IN THE COMBE FIELD
I looked a wild deer in the eye and held
its gaze while both of us remained motionless.
I saw it run like mine own desire, unfold
its leap and bounce and springiness.
I’d only gone into the garden to smoke
and saw it grazing, in its own world,
up by the babbling beck in the back,
contained in the museum that’s the field.
While I paused to watch it, it grazed away,
then noticed me and both of us froze.
While I was still, the deer looked at me
cautious of danger one might presuppose -
then I made a movement and it leaped,
jumped into orbit, red, running off fast.
I watched it running all the way, rapt,
and saw it leap over a fence at the last.
Cloaked in the aura of special perception,
the encounter was almost like a visit -
to see those elegant legs in extension -
as if the deer were an extension of the poet.
Nibbling up the beck my mouth is water
and when I speak it spills on the earth.
I try not to flaunt my role in Nature.
Down to the sea I flow without death.
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