THE
NATURALIST
Tonight
there is a pink moon in April’s sky.
Soon
the drum of summer will come.
I
like it when the pollen count is knocked
unconscious
by the summer rain
but
that is getting ahead of myself.
Tomorrow
is my 44th
birthday.
Hannah
and her partner and baby are coming up.
I
also like the yellow ‘M’ in “them.”
Something
Rimbaudian would be going on,
something
magnetic, if you saw the M as yellow
in
a random piece of prose. Like Rimbaud
I
explored the shapes of sadness,
heartbreaking
dawns. Now
I help
my
mother go through the toys.
She
is a good grandma and was a good
mother
too, with an emphasis on fun.
It
was easier to get a Big Mac out of
mum
than it was from my father.
The
Big Mac: it contains the four, basic,
caveman
cravings of salt, fat, sugar and protein,
is
the heir to the Apple of Knowledge.
But
these are rural parts, where
there
is no yellow McDonalds footprint
in
the sand, no camera crew on the paradise
island.
I now hear the toys being sorted
next
door, from the sitting room as
I
work in the kitchen, and reflect
that
I will never have children of mine own.
At
least the telly isn’t coming through the wall.
I
always mishear it, accentuate it into terrible things.
NOT THE NIRVANA BARCODE
I
With recent publications, I attained
Bush instead of Nirvana… but
imagine if I had attained Bob Dylan!
I picture him standing there, singing
“a hard rain’s going to fall,”
live and electric, putting his soul
into the show. But no -
I have merely attained Bush.
Bush
were never a bad band though.
Their
first album was great,
then
they got a
production genius
in
Steve
Albini for a producer,
and
the second album wasn’t as good,
but
it was still not bad.
It
was called Razorblade
Suitcase;
and
we did find out what was inside
the
razorblade suitcase at a later date.
II
As
for some of my own follies in the alchemy of perception...
The
<BEE> one was good, meaning
Soundcloud
Rain,
just
songs structured on the new da Vinci circle, but
the About The Author section showed I still didn’t know what I had
gone through as a boy.
The
Sunset
Child,
my boyhood
book, worked, back
in the day, if
inventing the net was the efficacy, but
not knowing that, I sold it to you as the homework of the witness
from The
Lords And The New Creatures.
The
love poem book Breath
Trapped In Heaven
said
“stop the war,” letting
all else but love fall away, but
it didn’t end up with a happy family.
Brave
New Tense
looked at the condition of water at the foot of the fell in terms of
a contract on universal human rights – or
something like that.
It
was about writing off the top of the head to discretely “do the
beck” in the back garden here where the Plough alignment is viable.
It
only meant “Long Foot Disease.”
Yes
You May
was about not using force. I
did it with my sister who is born on the 25th
May. I
think she was trying to say “it’s so bad you’re charging too
much.”
And
then
we had
Let
The Jews Win
– and
it worked…
it
preceded a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. As if the poet truly
is the unacknowledged legislator of the world. So it didn’t matter
that it repeated a few bits and bobs of my extant oeuvre because the
point was peace. But
some said if it includes the Nirvana barcode it’s still gone wrong.
III
This
morning I am thinking of a Leonard Cohen line:
“love
that is graceful and green as a stem.”
Then
I imagine attaining Leonard Cohen instead of Nirvana.
He
was a good poet, that worked with his secret chord.
IV
The
dawn was awash with blue today,
and
I was grateful for it after last night.
Now
a plane screams overhead, tearing
the
sky in two as it goes. Downstairs
mum
is in the kitchen. Today
I
have my anti-psychotic injection.
Now
I imagine attaining Syd Barrett’s
solo
work instead of Nirvana.
V
The
thing is I’m not really an airhead
and
read a lot of philosophy.
I
have something big in mind,
in
terms of the poet dreaming
big,
trying to change the world,
to
have courage and persistence -
but
I feel up against a wall.
It
might be that I am the one
who
needs to back down!
My
father after all was employed
by
a Russian bloke once
upon a time.
Then
again he did warn us of
the
dangers of just putting
anything
in, so
to speak,
like
it were an O. D. attempt
about
two decades ago, so
my
proclivity is not necessarily
inherently Russian.
VI
I
wonder if my brother’s <BEE>
– and
the notion that it might
come
after @ in the
international
language alphabet –
can
be implemented
to
bring about peace. But
I
fear a minor poet, bringing
out
a minor publication will
just
fall on deaf ears.
VII
Imagine
attaining Megadeth
instead
of Nirvana. Not
a
band I listened to much.
But
there is a cave on the face
of
the foothill Sea Ness;
and
at the back there is a portal;
and
the portal leads to a tunnel;
and
the tunnel is lined with free
beer
dispensers, torches
and
fruit machines; and
the
tunnel leads to the old U. S. S. R.
VIII
Imagine
attaining rave music
instead
of Nirvana. They
already
used to say raves
were
spiritual gatherings.
I’ve
been to some myself.
One
was an illegal gabba rave
in
a field in Cambridgeshire.
But
what this has to do
with
what I am trying to do
I
do not know except to say -
imagine
attaining Dylan.
IX
What
I am still writing for I do not know,
for
it may be a trap, but I am thinking
of
attaining Stravinsky instead of Nirvana.
At
the first performance of The
Rite of Spring
the
audience pulled out the seats
at
the end, so new did it all seem.
I
also like Stravinsky’s The
Firebird
where
he applies containment
to
Grieg albeit with darker inflections,
which
you can notice in the rhythm of the notes.
X
I imagine what it would be like
if a young boy wrote the line
“I have a scar+ that is the new colour,”
with a plus sign for the F,
and then counted up the numbers
from one to his own age, say, seven.
XI
Hannah makes a great cup of tea,
says it is only at the end
that you see the boyhood book
is still the best one I’ve done.
Therein I imagine attaining
Bob Marley instead of Nirvana.
That would be quite something.
XII
In the end we see, even I
don’t have the power to stop the war,
am just a feckless citizen
of a different country,
a little, witless blip on the ground,
a minor poet which is a cool thing to be,
who likes the words “ostranenie”, meaning
de-familiarisation, from
Russian Formalism, and also
“halatnost” meaning dressing-
gown-ness or detachment.
XIII
It could be she that says to me
if I need something to do
I should redo the wet.
It is through <BEE>
which is therefore definitely real
that I hear such a pow-wow
of telepathic proportions,
all tuned in to the same moment.
But the wet, that refers to
the motif of Brave New Tense -
to write off the top of your head
about your current situation,
to discretely “do the beck”
in the back garden where
the Plough alignment is viable.
XIV
When Paul’s daughter was born
I sent him a hyperlink
to the song by Peter Blegvad
about his daughter. Blegvad
once said my songs were Barrett
and my poems Rimbaud.
He should be as famous as Dylan himself.
Now I imagine attaining
Peter
Blegvad instead of Nirvana.
POEM
ABOUT A. I.
There
are as many questions to ask A. I.
as
there are stars up in the night sky
but
you might find it’s light years behind,
that
the brain is more powerful than every supercomputer combined.
It
doesn’t know James Joyce saw new creatures too,
long
before
he wrote You Know Who,
nor
that Ted Hughes saw a monster
in
the river in childhood when younger
nor
that Jim Morrison is said to have seen
winged
serpents in the desert or anything obscene.
For
it wouldn’t be ethical, I suppose
to
unloose on the world A. I. with those
facts
intact. And nor can A. I. say
what
happened to me in an earlier day.
When
I say “A. I. am I. A”
it’s
redolent of “et tu Brute.”
A.
I.
might come at music’s expense,
leave
us in the centre of a brave, new tense.
WALTER
I
A wallety-wallety-Walter,
because it’s good to feed your plants,
sat back in his new kitchen one day,
looking about him, insufflating
the acrid fume of his Vape,
wishing for an earthly paradise…
he was beset by evil whispers, saying
all sorts of things, but felt,
down at the bottom of a well,
like doing right. He couldn’t
go with Flora because somehow
he was in love with a neuro-scientist
that liked to average out the waves
even if that day was long gone.
He could hear them, talking
on magic alphabet radio stations
beyond all knowing, knowing zero.
Even if it was only his bro that reads,
he still felt he had needs, to do
something good with his life and art
like healing the soul of the world.
II
He lived in an era of putting
anything in, Ajax, shampoo, vitamin Z,
4CMC, and the dangers of that
are well known to peace-loving drug-takers
and O. D. cases alike… but still,
he seemed to have given up fags
and booze, not to mention
all those other terrible things,
just to give himself a better chance
of leading a happy, peaceful life,
where the Plough alignment is viable,
in the sticks. Even as he sat he was dining
out on a map of sound. For words
were easy to come by in hearing
voices whom it would seem
could be onjects, quavers,
syllabubbles or sonic machinations
at the periphery of selection.
And when he was stuck, he
went with them, but only sometimes.
He lived in fear and wished
for a life of increased kindness
and attention, for all concerned.
III
He decided whatever he was doing
he was going to add them to his last book,
even if it meant that it was through
a government scientist that he was seen
as the Devil. He pondered a while,
thinking back to when he thought
life is one. It was increasingly hard
because for one thing there were those
that wished to renew the wood
and those that didn’t, and he
was caught in the firing line.
He still deemed it that a poem
is a two-way mirror and a poet
an invisible conductor behind the scene,
even if by now it was through
some kind of machine which we dream.
IV
He still didn’t like the way his friends
rhymed “seems” and “dreams”
nor the way it seemed to come via needle,
or the cold feel of the cold-calling vibe,
but he preferred the rhyme of “butter”
and “nutter.” Voices, voices everywhere
and not a drop to think! They came
cluttering into the inner ear from
all round! To lift a new dawn from the sea!
He did not know in the meantime if he
was free to say “come again and share”
but by now recognised that a juggernaut
shouldn’t still wait at the end of the War.
This was the most advanced handle
we had on the matter of negotiation,
here, miles away, as gentle readers.
But mum says we are evolving
out of juggernauts, and she is often right.
V
Averaging out the waves in neuro-science
sounds like a beautiful line of work,
even if it be on a computer. You’d be
amazed at what we really can do,
for like a wiser man than I am once said, “yes we can.”
I remember when it was all about Osama
then another guy came along and
things got better, things got well.
Even if I were knitting a winter fleece
it
would have to be cleared with the police.
ELSTREE AND BOREHAMWOOD
Permutation
games can be a rehearsal for death. Not sine wave with minus sign
coursing through. Tony Eade the gay maths teacher
stood with his arms in a T and spoke in a strange tone when
announcing to the boarders that it was chess club tonight.
Intention – what is my Intention, but to shed scientific light, to
make an imaginative advance, to contribute to the history of
knowledge and maybe make the world a better place? In this world we
are all equals. The image is of Egyptian mystery. Maybe.
You
don’t need a knife to achieve it.
SQUILLEGYBOB
Still the Squillegybob is more…
still I haven’t got it.
Rendered dense on medication,
dense as a thicket of trees,
I can but report that
Professor Squillegybob
is a character from my fiction
who only uses very long words.
If you like he becomes a Function.
A Function in chaos and uncertainty.
His profuse verbosity,
fanciful magniloquence,
effusive vernacular
was often contrasted with the opposite.
Something down to earth.
Something New Beat.
Something less posh.
We can take it away with the Professor
but it might seem nonsensical.
It might all seem to be about PH levels.
But still I haven’t got it.
Stop. We let it run on.
The reason it is like that is difference.
JUST THE MUNDANE
Toilet paper. Sunday. Weather. Toast. Maps – an O. S. map of time come alive on magic mushrooms like an angel laptop, or lap. I disturbed my rhythm a bit. The colour green. Bank notes. Rhythm itself. Bisto gravy. Leaves. Winter though. My concentration shot to pieces. Medication, medication, medication. The times tables. Anything for grounding, re-entry into reality, please. An aid to memory. A Dorian mode of words or not. Hurry up and come dot com. It will be not long. Death-magnet. Cheeks. Broad beans. Pistol. The gardener is chopping the beech hedge. It hasn’t been chopped since dad did it, with cancer, only a few days before he died. James and I dragged the garden waste to a bonfire in the field. Dad liked to have a bonfire in the field and get his sons to take stuff to it. We miss him; and the garden has gone to seed since he left the land of the living. Hopefully our new gardener can fix it. Feel sick today. Something’s up. Fear of death. Fidgeting hands fondle pharmaceutical pills. But all of this is a distraction. I remember telling dad “the forefront of mythology is physics; poetry is more about the mundane.” I hadn’t read The Hippopotamus at the time but he had. Opening a stone now to see, smell, hear, touch and feel its insides I find a Sixth Sense. There is something of the same instinct that underlies the variability of all different modes of writing. Paratactic grammar. More full stops fewer commas. It’s chilly today. Wrap up warm. Wood, list, smoke. Basic necessities. Drums. Sometimes I was an arsehole to my dad – remember him being kind though. I came back home bedraggled, ransacked, after adventures in ecstasy-taking down south and just broke into hot, salty tears at the table, left and went outside and he followed me, and hugged me and asked what was wrong, whether it was the steak at the table. I remember that hug. His chest was deeper than mine, his hands even bigger. Dad’s hands. Gone hands. I don’t want this to become emotional waste though. This is not automatic writing from the point of view of an anus as a mouthpiece but such a thing has been attempted in New Beat days of having no manifesto. Girls are good. Ones and zeros. Dots and dashes. Ducks and dulls. Peaks and troughs. Knives and forks. Sense And Sensibility. Swings and roundabouts don’t forget. Then the underlying template – at 17 my favourite poem book was The Lords And The New Creatures - but it wasn’t the only book. A brainstorming session at the table, this process feels redemptive, healing. Shame it can’t go on forever. Every word in every order has been done. So it’s just about being fair with one’s own portion of the cake. My intellect is bruised by a ridiculous O. D. attempt I was lucky to survive. And how could I forget tea? Leave it. Wait. Before you’ve undone another.
IN ORDINARY SPEECH
“When I was seven I wrote a book
that performed four functions:
to encrypt a scientific node to do
with Gravity; to store the idea
of the internet in writing in the attic
at the foot of Black Combe to
give the net a chance to grow
all the way round the world;
to calibrate an algorithm that
sublimates letters and numbers
on a cellular level to see if the
new colour could be rendered
as a cellular mark; and to separate
the object ‘pollen’ from its name.
It was a book with a heartbeat.
It had a heartbeat. It made
the sound of footsteps in the attic.
It’s been stolen by the gypsies.
It was in The Dream Suitcase
along with some other priceless things
like the sheet where pictures grew
and the cassette that was cooked
when its small pause in the song
where the reel was cut and re-
sealed healed and was gone.
I think they were after the sheet
where pictures grew, but by the time
they stole The Dream Suitcase, there
was only my seven year old book in it.
I still have bits of it typed up -
bits of it went into a publication -
but not all of it - and the original,
the handwritten version with
the
heartbeat, is now gone.”
EIGHTEEN
QUESTIONS
Why
must I sleep through the day?
Because
you stayed up through the night.
Why
have I got
nothing
to say?
Because
your mind isn’t right.
What
of Barnes has scored a chicken?
It’s
something to say but not true.
Is
it
time to knock the battery off the pollen?
That’s
something for a child to do.
Can’t
I think of something worth saying?
You’ve
a list of things that have been said before.
Should
I not know before I start playing?
Maybe
but there is no fixed law.
If
I stop what exactly will happen?
You’ll
get restless and start again.
Is
it just then a nervous affliction?
Maybe
all I need is a length of metal chain.
But
what exactly does that mean?
It
means whatever you make of it.
Do
you think Flora was the undying One?
Maybe
but you might have idealised it.
Does
I. T. stand for Captain Marvel?
No,
but I can see where you’re going with that.
Should
I let my myriad mind unravel?
It
might be fine in your guarded habitat.
Is
Lucy in the soul with demons an
actual
substance?
That
is something I do not know.
And
what of the clock unto State
science?
It’s
not something to outright say.
And
what of the dotty clouds floating by?
The
way they change is like
incipient species in Darwin.
And
what about my brother’s <BEE>?
You
shouldn’t say but still get it in.
And
what when there’s no more to be said?
There’s
always more to not say.
And
what about when you’re too exhausted?
Then
you must try and sleep through the day.
HELIUM
AUBADE
Are
we not travelling by predictive text,
vexed,
into the unknown future
increasingly
driven as it is by
profit
and technological advance?
I
would like to say yes but still
take
a step back, find an abeyance
that
stretches like insipid, bisexual gum,
cherish
the moment once more.
The
future is not what it used to be.
Every
day I wake to the altar
of
the laptop screen and worship,
even
out here in semi-wilderness.
Remarkable
visions have gone on,
across
the board in their definition,
redefining
the world in its repercussions,
still
insisting we stick with the Doors.
The
neo-London skyline stops;
the
passengers disembark from the vehicle.
Some
of the buildings wear cool,
Aviator-Ray
Bans that detonate with light.
But
really I am here and not there.
Here
where there is no Burger King
joint
atop the oldest fell, to
celebrate
a new word for archaic ‘gay.’
There
has been visual radio before,
and
Smart-talk live in sentient air,
and
more and more and many more,
but
it’s better to relate than invent.
People
from the future, they can
send
bright skywriting across the Night,
when
you stand in the field looking
up
at it on your final Ecstasy Pill.
No,
we must live in the present tense,
for
now is the only time and place.
Now
and here and real and feeling
is
where love lives, all too little of it too.
You
literary critics out there might
know
of
words
like chronotope,
euchronia,
infradiegetic heterotopia,
but
here we have the pleasant Shire.
Rolling,
Postman Pat valley curves
lead
down
to
the sea, but away in town
I
remember when I saw a cloud
of
powder’d light billow in
like
magic curtains on the high,
karmic
wind and let me know
that
the room was an open chamber.
Again
the past seems to have passed,
and
the
visual
radio, or colourful smoke,
that
ensued,
has left the poet
with
nothing but the smell of water,
the
daily soap opera of the goldfish bowl,
quotidian
consciousness, status
life
detail, downloading the lowdown
of
downtime, without any vision anymore.
Water,
water, clairvoyant daughter,
please
show us your ragged, silken eye.
On
this much medication I see
no
future unlike in
times
gone by.
But
to address my quest for the future
would
seem apt, so that it goes
for
miles, of clear sight, forwards
as
the curve tends, unilinear or not.
I
have been to the brink of death, in short.
And
Darwin says death is Nature’s
way
of bringing new species into being.
And
so one day I will lie down
in
a field and have to think no more.
In
this way the Sixth Sense may
be
thanatos, an increased awareness
of
one’s mortality as the perceptual
kingdom
of the individual enters overdrive.
I
plundered heart valve mutation
from
the very graves of intelligence
at
the gates of the dusky dawn
but
it’s not something of which to boast.
Now
vehicles pass and take my life
away,
piece by piece, on the road,
as
I worship at this altar in the morning,
with
a nice supply of tepid tea.
Sipping
tea is enough for me, and
is
not to see the way things will be,
for
I cannot say, unlike when I foresaw,
for
example September 11th
in 2000.
If
it is only my own death I see,
I
hope to go out smiling like a child,
peacefully
at night, in my sleep,
and
to be cremated and scattered with dad.
I
imagine waking again with my
memory
erased, that the future provides
default
buttons to wipe a slate clean.
Other
pen-knife
tools I have ideated, meanwhile,
are
ridiculous, a virtual death machine,
a
drug called Strictly Free, an
holographic
horsecock wheeled in,
a
red-bleeding type-writer inside
a ping pong ball,
an
invisible square of air called
Mosaic
by Darth Vader, stroked
on
live TV, a word-chord synthesiser
though
that one does not belong to me,
a
neutraliser drink that sobers you up
in
one quick instant, the Nirvana
button
or Nirvana pill, the Doors
computer
game, the psycho-sensitive
fire-alarm,
the hyperlink to Heaven,
and
what’s wrong with them is that
they
are not real as silver steal,
only
pipe-dreams, which may
or
may not come into being. Things
can
go the other way too, like
when
I had the idea to invent
binaural
earphones on which to
record
the band, and
someone
else
actually
implemented that one,
and
I climbed up on the album,
said
I’d “plug my senses in the mains.”
Of
course we’ll see the self-driving car,
and
already
the automated conveyor
belt
of poetry flows from room
to
room looking for body and form.
Already
the tape with the pause
where
cut and resealed in the flimsy
reel
was a successful fusion, already
the
numinous, purple-bleeding screen,
already
the sprightly hypertext-sniper
on
Piper
At The Gates of Dawn,
already
the effervescent mobile phone, reverberating
the
rhythm of ‘William Tell’ through
every
technological inlet in the room,
already
these things are as if “halfware,”
already
the binaural earphone recordings,
already
the telegraph pole exploded,
as
I typed up the plot of Eraserhead
on
my
purple PC for a Blog online,
already
the sheet where pictures
grew
is portentous of the end
of
the chip, already these things
are
laid out like the things of a beautiful mind.
To
text myself to sleep when
I
cannot nod off would also
be
a good thing,
but
we already have “buttons” for that.
Now
I note that it is approaching
time
for medication, and that
poetry
can be a machine to that end,
a
machine for remembering to take
your
medication, which is no sad thing.
In
science we trust, our little, bitter,
pill
which art in Heaven, white.
I
can foresee that I’ll make it to dawn,
but
not much after that. The ingredients
of
Apple Juice might make a found poem,
in
a psycho-technological sense.
Already
a “tron” seems to be a
point
of intersection between technology
and
art or a post-poetic experiment
with
a psycho-technological edge…
I’ve
been involved with many such
“post-poetic
experiments,” as I have
imparted,
and they all seem to have
escaped
the shape of the paper.
I
remember when Mary told me
of
the vision to which I am now privy
and
how there should still be
room
for Nature in the future…
we
used to go exploring just to
look
at trees in her car but she
won’t
want to be in it, and not
wanting
to bin it I will leave the rest out.
The
pre-dawn light is like a negative,
or
like mercury as it leaks out,
as
I try and drag this discussion
back
to the present tense, like in meditation.
And
when we see a spiritual or germ
X-ray
will we find the germs
of
dictatorship are on all hands?
And
when water collapses, will water
collapsed
be the infra-structure of State?
Will
there be a statue of Kate crumbling
like
ecstasy in the centre of town?
And
what, I ask at
this frosty dawn,
of
every word, book, sentence, letter,
paragraph
in every order, as no doubt
a
government super-computer can
already
conjure by now? Many
small
presses are going under;
great
genius remains obtuse; the best
stuff
might remain underground too.
And
in the middle of it all I find
myself
writing, as if I were meant to,
agglomerating
quantity like a Conceptualist,
trying
not to copy voices for then
it
is Flarf, struck by the wonder of dawn.
SONG
NHS,
it’s good to plug in,
the
science works, so let me begin…
I
went from reading the lesson from John
at
the Carol Service in Eton College Chapel
to
living in Sheltered Accommodation
and
eating at the soup kitchen.
From
top
to
bottom I fell,
in
a katabatic direction,
looking
for Rock Bottom.
The
poet extirpates every trace
of
recognition from the myriad mind,
unlooses
the mind of form,
method-acts
every adjective in ‘Howl’
to
attain visual radio, broadcasting dreams.
And
the NHS, which I heard called
“The
National Hypochondriac Service,”
and
“a religion substitute for the atheist
left,”
has been there for me.
Now
I am back in my mum’s
million
pound house at the foot
of
the fell, but we have no money.
We
survive off State benefits.
We
can’t afford to heat the house
at
the fag-end of winter, and
there
are no jobs for miles, not
that
I can even work what with
Stress
being an enemy of my mental illness.
Relying
as I do on the NHS,
on
State benefits too, I think
to
explore the left is to explore
a
beautiful, compassionate emotion.
COLD
FINGERS
The
gardener’s here but
we
don’t know if we can pay her.
We
look around for the money,
find
enough and I take it to her.
Now
mum’s
got cold fingers
because
I left her door open.
I
imagine death also
has
cold fingers too.
THE
BEAR IN THE WINDOW
Now
I know why my mate Mr. G. is a drummer -
I’ve
got it all right and there isn’t a whisper,
a
nod, let alone a book review. I can but
abandon
a manuscript on a Blogspot page.
My
friend meanwhile has the drums -
the
snare like a scalpel blade, the bass drum
stuffed
with a pillow for gravity like a heart -
maybe
some poppadom hi-hats creeping in.
He’s
also got painting, painting the portraits
of
the pantheon of rock and jazz musicians,
from
photos and with the music on and in mind, meaning
he
mixes Romanticism with the postmodern readymade…
they
watch on like guards from the walls
which
immure us in the studio, no speech bubbles,
just
eyes that follow you around the room,
as
you try to get a good sound out of your stuff.
It
makes me feel like Frank O’ Hara in a way,
mourning
the other arts I cannot do, how
the
drums make a sound unlike my poem file -
how
the paintings can be changed beyond recognition.
I
am but a drummer as well sometimes though,
tapping
out words with two middle fingers
at
the plastic letters of the qwerty keyboard,
a
conduit for the gods that look down, but
nothing
so dramatic or dynamic is happening,
as
when my friend plays drums, banging
the
equipment along to some grand melody,
always
on time like a post-atomic clock.
You
can fill a poem file of potential
infinite
space
like
a drawer that gets full very fast, but
with
drums you can play on as long as your heart
is
beating, alone, in its cave, with a club.
If
I were clubbed unconscious by my own heart,
I’d
say something Hughes-esque is going on,
further
only to note in alchemy of perception,
life
is a dull throb of loneliness in your chest.
FATHER
POEM
That
the poem is a two-way mirror;
that
the poet is an invisible conductor
behind
the scenes; that Rimbaud
is
only a token in intellectual exchange:
my
morning thoughts are memories.
My
morning walk was to my father’s
grave
– a rough-hewn slab of slate,
carved
with his name and dates, not
the
smooth marble others went for.
And
he was recalcitrant, a renegade.
No
prayer was said at his grave today.
But
I remember coming home from
some
accidental happening and saying
physics
is more the forefront of mythology
and
poetry more about the mundane.
What’s
left of life must not be wasted.
Life
is fragile, as dad and I agreed.
On
the way home I looked out to sea
at
the squadron of wind-mills making
electricity.
The scene opened up;
I
came home and made some tea.
The
drip-feed of tea will last all day.
I
may have rarefied thoughts or not.
Dad
would say “don’t go back to bed.”
Living
in the sticks with mental illness is hard.
MORNING
PAGES
[a
new song]
How
do you do Ryuken?
Ableton
is broken,
like
the first morning,
nothing
left to decide.
The
kids will want a garden,
spaces
that are open,
I
wish I had some pollen,
surrender
to the tide.
The
morning’s come to names,
we
left our old flames
in
the land of dreams
and
now will play our games.
I’m
not up for fighting,
witness
in the lightning,
the
winter wind is biting,
I
dreamed of love and trust.
There
has been a sighting
of
something that is fleeting,
the
job is a good one,
ending
up in dust.
The
morning’s come to names,
we
left our old flames
in
the land of dreams
and
now will play our games.
Drake
is in the wilderness,
suffer
teeming emptiness,
nothing
comes from Nothingness
except
nothing at all.
Another
day has begun,
and
even though there is no sun,
it
could be a good one,
where
I remember Paul.
The
morning’s come to names,
we
left our old flames
in
the land of dreams
and
now will play our games.
WHEN
I GET HUNGRY LATER
When
I get hungry later,
cannot
afford any food,
I
may look back at my time
of
spending money on publishing
as
a lot of folly; but for now
the
urgent, truant vehicle of
speech
presses forwards
and
I see nothing better
to
spend what little spare money
I
have on than buying books.
I
could end up in the gutter
from
which the football songs are born,
lying
back looking at the stars
while
I listen to the singing of the drains.
To
aim Low has been my ideal.
My
song lyrics were meant
for
wiping up semen. My
language
had no Dorian Modes.
But
still I press on. The stars
above
me would mix with satellites,
as
I lay back in the gutter, finding
that
grunge is the forefather
of grime,
but
still I see a point to this,
like
keeping the sacred
fire
of the heart alive.
TRUNCATED
DREAMWORK POEM
Just
the tail end of a dream today,
skiing
down
a mountain as snow thaws,
to
end up in a patch of grass, then listening
to
Nirvana Unplugged
but
not the Doors.
Not
enough for a dreamwork diary,
but
what came before the tail end?
Not
the bond between a mother and a baby -
but
I cannot remember, can’t extend
my
memory’s reach back into the brain
to
retrieve what it was. Stuffed with truth,
I
insufflate the wispy fume of my Vape pen,
look
out at the snowdrops on the earth.
It’s
that time again, approaching spring,
when
soon more birds will be heard to sing.
THE
RIDONKULOUS DONKASAURUS
“What’s the most obvious donk around you
and how many donks deep
and did the donk descend
to get to the donk on the end of it?”
– These lines were written on a train,
stoned, newly stoned, coming
back from town with a stash
to the foot of the oldest fell.
Looking around me now
I see the kitchen, and do not miss
stoner life, going out in the rain to score,
begging a tenner off your neighbour.
And the writing that came hand in hand -
it was no better, only seemed good
because of the effect, even the line
“ride the wave of paranoia.”
Writing stoned can make you
write things that are untrue,
misremember half-formed things,
give
the wrong impression entirely.
REFILLING
THE TEA CUP
Snails.
Stones. Just the mundane again. But don’t copy yourself. I was
hoping for an unspooling. Boredom curing and time killing session.
What great demeanours and laughters will we attain? The radiator is
white. Easy as loo-roll to an I-don’t-know-what. The wheel of the
seasons is turning. A dark, foreboding tint is present, subliminal –
like the horror of daytime telly in a way. Voices are catastrophic.
Mother’s cookery books line the shelves in the kitchen. A black mug
on the table. The gardener driving away. SY63 RBV. You
should find something. You should find a Tap. Qwerty is but a squirty
water-pistol, that gets stocked up on drugs in Bristol. And didn’t
Michael Hofmann wish he could write poetry all day every day?
Disappointment. An umpteenth cup of tea. The Postman comes in his red
van in this Postman Pat-like valley. Letters
for mum from the NHS. Interest in the dust that lies at the bottom of
things. Already painting final words about DMT. And when I read The
Lords And The New Creatures
for the first time, the beautiful ending was stamped on my memory
verbatim, and became a template for teenage love poems, for the
mating queen from the green pages in the flesh. Could it be a garden
brick? Imagine a wall! The mind’s ear lies behind the mind’s eye.
Water
itself. Rods and cones. Do you see the candle or the Bunsen Burner?
The Optimus Prime Function allows the sharing of assets, or would if
it were real. Barnes is real. Luke Skywalker isn’t real; Indiana
Jones isn’t real; James Bond isn’t real – but Barnes is real.
The reason for kicking a ball against the wall on a Saturday, Barnes
was a great bringer of happiness in my childhood. Still on the search
for a common sense philosophy, or rarefied shelfspace of vision,
still expounding an aesthetic philosophy of dust, I stop to feel the
broken machinery of the heart. I have nothing to do but process time
to the perfectionist permutation-game of the grammarian. I
could be an alien peeling back the plastic foreskin of a cucumber.
The pain hasn’t gone. Relief is only sporadic if ever. Drab day.
Mum gets home. The loose, Betfair jingle of shingle lifted from the
big, flat bird-table when cars arrive in the drive or leave.
Something like that could be used to encrypt the song ‘You Can’t
Touch This’ by MC Hammer. Strictly no telling. Coupled with the
glug of smuggle or drug or ugly truth revealed inside, of housepipes,
guiltily gulping from their jug. Sometimes the sense that the whole
house is aloft on plumbing that defies the laws of physics. As if
reality were a computer program designed by aliens in the 1980’s.
Fetching
coal in the scuttle. Nothing.
A
RUSTLING OF WRAPPERS
The
dark is mine, the quiet yours,
I
wake at night and go downstairs,
go
outside but there are no stars
to
show the cleansing of the doors.
The
door is open, the light is on,
to
heal the air that has
gone
F.
M. and
even just to feel again
I
sit and write on my own.
Mum
wakes up in the dead of night,
though
she’ll not wish to be in it.
The
dark is black, the quiet white
and
hushed the room where now I sit.
I
hear the ticking of the clock.
To
be observed comes as a shock.
The
Tap is silent but each tick tock
makes
my heart want to break.
CLOUDSPOTTING
It’s all contained in bright, sculpted clouds,
their narrative of animals migrating East:
a horse, a mouse, a crocodile, Protean, flowing,
ever-changing, never to be captured,
never to be exactly the same again.
So it could be the memoir of a God,
that tattered tapestry scattered in the sky.
I watch through pellucid windows,
like Hamlet espying three creatures
in a cloud-change. Meaning in music
is the same: it is creatures in the clouds.
It is also faces in the fire, solipsistic
but this is old news, and what we want
is
news that has not yet gone stale.
So
they come to pass and go do clouds
and
it is the same for the moment.
The
moment comes and goes, and
the
journey of life is the blink of an eye.
The
opposite of ‘hello’ is ‘ok’ not ‘goodbye.’
HERE
COME THE WAVES
Here
they come,
here
come the waves,
let’s
move our bodies
and
dance a little bit
and
when they come
in
all shapes and sizes
that’s
when we need
to
average out the waves
here
they come,
here
come the waves,
let’s
see through music,
let’s
rule our kingdoms with song
don’t
pave the wave,
unless
you’re a slave,
unless
you want
things
to turn out wrong
here
they come,
here
come the waves,
let’s
let the phet
be
a little bet with the mind
and
when we lose
and
have the blues
that’s
when we choose
to
not continue colour-blind
SPONTANEOUS
SONG OF THE MAD MIND
I
was walking down the valley,
in
search of Where’s Wally,
and
I became a silly billy
and
everything was willy nilly
and
the squiggles on the page
were
the corners of the room
and
everything was in a cage
at
the foot of Black Combe.
There
were six pills in the evening,
five
pills in the morning,
three
pills at lunch time,
while
the new Age was dawning,
and
there was an emotive charge
in
the cables overhead
and
the headlines were a splurge
and
some things are best left
unsaid.
SAYING GOODBYE TO MA
“You had me but I never had you,”
as the man-mountain John Lennon sang.
You put your hand in the fire.
Now as you go shopping to Millom,
I say goodbye with proleptic strains.
When I was a youngster, my first day of school,
I clung to your leg and wouldn’t let go.
You were the one who made the flower-press
ending on cannabis that = dialysis
and I was the one that wrote a love poem
for Flora that = a motor. I hope
you have another twenty years in you.
It is only in the silence between voices,
barked instructions, strictures,
stringent thought-police, that I
think of saying goodbye to you.
I hope you’re not planning on going
anywhere yet, only to Millom by car
to collect some shopping from Tesco.
I leant you my card because I like
to pay my way. (My 3484 is already
in the chorus of a recorded song.)
Anyhow I realise in a flash that it
might be me that’s on the way out;
I tried to terminate my life before.
“Dear Mama,” my first note began -
“plush and strange is the luxury of seeing
your own face in the mirror for the last time.”
But as you say no parent should ever
have their child die before them. So
it is that I say goodbye to you, from
a mixed and ambiguous perspective,
from a gravity-trapped seat of wood in
the kitchen at the foot of the fell.
The only problem with going there
with Flora’s pretext, her system,
is
that she will want to see some Rights.
MUM’S
CROSS
Mum’s
cross because someone
has
eaten all the Easter eggs…
she
bought two packets of mini-eggs yesterday,
said
to me that my brother and I
could
share them out between us,
left
the room, and then I said,
to
my brother, he could have my share,
so
my brother ate both packets.
Now
it turns out we were
supposed
to share them out
between
the three of us, and
mum
really craves them though they’re
gone.
Even though I didn’t get
a
single chocolate egg, I am to blame
for
there not being a single one left.
The
north wind also makes mum
angry,
but today it is calm. Yesterday’s
stampede
has blown over. That
angry
wind-god has hushed,
left
the garden a quiet pocket.
There
is a thin, lank, HB pencil
drizzle,
dotting the puddle and
making
the wind-shield tear-strewn.
The
skies are grey, the dome a
cement
mixer where mushy, wishy-
washy,
amorphous cloud covers it.
Now
the window’s big, oblong,
staring
eye is crying, as a child
would
notice and remember.
If
I were inside a caravan I
would
feel especially cosy.
It’s
days like this when a kid
might
design a menu for
an
imaginary pub, as I did
a
long time ago, in a galaxy far far away.
I
don’t know what we are going
to
do about replacing mum’s eggs.
She
seems really hurt by their absence.
Yet
she finds escape, cheap distraction,
diversion
from the situation in doing
crosswords
and sudokus on a tablet.
Now
a few bright lances of light
come
out from behind a cloud
in
all their brilliance, detonating
on
the windows of the two cars
parked
out the front, offering
us
a glimpse of a better day.
I
take my body, this body made of
drugs,
chemical messages, signals,
next
door to ask my mother who
won
the ice hockey at the winter
Olympics
but she says nothing.
I
assume she is still in a mood with me,
for
letting James eat the mini-eggs.
‘I
KNEW THAT SHE LOVED ME’ REVISITED
I
was reading a Ted Hughes poem from Crow
about
the anatomisation of the lover
at
the same table as fragrant Rachel in English
and
thought I could do one like it.
That
was what lead to the poem called
‘I
Knew That She Loved Me,’
which
I wrote in my bedsit in Lower Sixth.
My
grannies had both died in the same week.
I
had lost my virginity and acid-virginity
at
Glastonbury before attending this new school,
where
I had set up a poetry magazine.
It’s
wasn’t my idea to make them Anon,
and
I was glad there was a list of contributors
in
the back. We
made them Anon so that
less
confident poets would feel less afraid, less
ashamed
to contribute.
I
still have no desire
to
be Anon, and have researched my rights.
There
is something called The Right to Attribution
that
means nobody else can force you
into
being Anon against your wishes.
More
to the point, if you read
something
like John Stuart Mill’s
fine
essay
On
Liberty,
you find a progressive
country
can become stagnant, staid, sterile,
stale
and stationary with dead values
and
dead customs very fast if there is
a
decrease in Individuality. That’s
the
main reason I don’t wish to be Anon.
I
have said it before but I think a writer
has
a Right to a name otherwise
an
Exclusion of the Individual Machine
can
close ranks against you as in Orwell.
SIRENS
ON THE ROCKS
Sirens
on the rocks these days
could
be unpacked in a multiplicity of ways -
for
voices could be “onjects,” quavers, syllabubbles,
sonic
machinations at the periphery
of
selection. There is a variety
of
magic alphabet radio stations.
Listen.
In the future they could be
difference
rather than illness. So
proleptic
and co-imaginative they seem,
all
tuned in to the same moment,
but
from diverse sources. I admit
my
ship is sinking. If you believe it,
it
is there, naked under nearer stars,
softly
swashing, backwashing music,
music
in a room with no door.
A
QUIET VAMPIRE
I
suck on my red wine,
take
it in, like a quiet vampire.
My
drunken chaos orbit swirls,
Dionysian,
atavistic, telluric.
There
is no smoke, be it
colourful
or not, colourful
as
visual radio or not,
only
the Vape pen I insufflate but
I
exhale religion on wine.
I
exhale dogma, prejudice
that
is only rearranged,
read
the mangled sign post
of
the world that says
mystery
will remain a constant.
It
might be taking me back
to
days beyond recognition
in
the hot coals of the heart
where
former loves lie.
Promises
to do better
are
no longer credible.
But
the velvet flares
I
wore still brushed the ground
where
now I stand atop
my
Mnt Oblivion and release
a
primal squawk to the waiting
world
like a demented goose
gone
wobbly in the wing,
jiggling
its little bling,
inviting
the world to sing
and
dance on broken school
or
spool that falls out
of
the mouth like spittle
when
you drool over
a
naked woman’s body.
Pain
follows the sharp exit
of
the bear whose honey
glows
like doors ajar
in
the sentient air.
Why
my mother’s fire
needs
attention is life.
It
squabbles and bickers
like
cobbled streets of the heart.
That
a flame is cobbled
is
new to me since the wine.
The
wine undoes all
the
farmer’s pink bindatwine.
He
sealed the gate shut
and
deemed it would be shit,
whatever
literature came out
of
the cave’s gaping mouth.
We
stop for a bit and wait.
We
want you to stop.
MY
FIRST DROP OF TELLY FOR AGES
I’ve
just seen my old mate on telly;
his
mum’s B and B was on Hotel Inspector
on
Channel 5 at 9 o’ clock...
I
watched it with my own mother.
I
was reminded that I’ve been there before
on
the way back from Glastonbury
that
year when my mate
smuggled
me backstage in his van…
I
was inside the cupboard with a bottle
of
Lemonade to wee in, hiding
as
the van went through queue after queue;
and
when we finally got backstage
I
got out the van and so did my mate
and
there was the lead singer of The Clash
weeing
into a didgeridoo for a laugh.
It
wasn’t the year I met Thom Yorke
or
walked past Kate Moss on acid,
but
it was a good year, a year of joy,
and
who we saw I cannot recall,
possibly
The White Stripes, among it all,
and
so much weed around the fire,
and
I wrote of blank pages flung
from
the sun on a mixture of mushrooms and E,
and
got an internal suntan but slept in the rain.
All
those jackets and tents left behind,
we
wandered through them asking if
there
was any spare weed to find,
so
we could have a final spliff.
I
think of my own music, now they say
I
was the Nick Drake of their age,
who
grew mentally ill before recognition;
but
mostly it pales by comparison to his.
OVERVIEW
So it’s the night, the night I deem it just the music… but my friends already said they liked my seven year old text. If I were to deem it just the music I’d copy and paste in a Discography:
To
listen to The Flood, whose
album was recorded on binaural earphones, visit
rhythm
guitarist Tom
Woodhall’s page on Soundcloud.
To
listen to my first solo album, ‘Songs To Record With Earphones’
[Demo 3], visit John F B Tucker’s Soundcloud page.
To
listen to
the
E. P. I made with Grant Aspinall back when we were still called
Funnelspirals, it
is called ‘The A and E. P.’ by Funnelspirals and can be found on
Soundcloud.
To
listen to the four albums of the new da Vinci circle, even
though they are not really meant to be listened to, only read in a
book, visit
John F B Tucker on Bandcamp and
look for Various Artists.
To
listen to other
collaborations with
Grant Aspinall,
including
the
song ‘Eternal Full Moon,’ including when
we put Blake to music, including
‘Seclusion,’ including ‘Snake Snake Butterfly’ visit
Grant Aspinall on Bandcamp.
To
listen to ‘Unplugged At The Foot of Sea Ness’ visit John F B
Tucker on Bandcamp.
To
listen to ‘Wishlist’ by The Flood, visit John F B Tucker’s
other Soundcloud page.
The
best one was probably the binaural earphone record, in The Flood,
whom it seems I can sometimes hear sound out. The Flood’s binaural
earphone recordings might be enough. If however I were to deem it the
six poetry collections I brought out with Chipmunka, I would copy and
paste in a different segment of text…
The
<BEE> one was good, meaning
Soundcloud
Rain,
just
songs structured on the new da Vinci circle, but
the About The Author section showed I still didn’t know what I had
gone through as a boy.
The
Sunset
Child,
my boyhood
book, worked, back
in the day, if
inventing the net was the efficacy, but
not knowing that, I sold it to you as the homework of the witness
from The
Lords And The New Creatures.
The
love poem book Breath
Trapped In Heaven
said
“stop the war,” letting
all else but love fall away, but
it didn’t end up with a happy family.
Brave
New Tense
looked at the condition of water at the foot of the fell in terms of
a contract on universal human rights – or
something like that.
It
was about writing off the top of the head to discretely “do the
beck” in the back garden here where the Plough alignment is viable.
It
only meant “Long Foot Disease.”
Yes
You May
was about not using force. I
did it with my sister who is born on the 25th
May. I
think she was trying to say “it’s so bad you’re charging too
much.”
And
then
we had
Let
The Jews Win
– and
it worked…
it
preceded a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. As if the poet truly
is the unacknowledged legislator of the world. So it didn’t matter
that it repeated a few bits and bobs of my extant oeuvre because the
point was peace. But
some said if it includes the Nirvana barcode it’s still gone wrong.
So
those are the six Chipmunka collections… there were if you can
believe it 9 self-published volumes before the Chipmunka batch. I
believe these are authored by John F B Tucker as opposed to just John
Tucker. Then in the middle of the Chipmunka batch I went off on an
adventure in philosophy bringing out three volumes of a book called
Transition
To Philosophy
under the pen-name Johannes Bergfors. I already feel like I’ve done
too much and yet achieved too little. I’ve never been in a
professional studio with a producer making a professional album for
example; nor had a professional book deal. I suppose it can damage
one’s reputation to only go through amateur means all the time.
If
it were to all stop now, I’d say, as a book writer, Let
The Jews Win
would’ve been enough; and even the seven year old text would’ve
been enough too. I also have some nice photographs: one is of the
melted tape, the tape that had a small pause where cut and resealed
in the flimsy reel. When the pause was done away with and the fusion
successful, I cooked the tape in the AGA. Another photo is of my
brother’s sheet where pictures grew. Some people think I should win
the Pulitzer Prize for it! There are also a few attempts to capture
the partial, only partial, Plough alignment on my Smartphone.
I’d
like to do more, but don’t know what. There are a number of options
on my blog at the moment, including
some that resonate as being beautiful-minded, like a proof that
suggests the maths that invented the net was
indebted to Einstein and turned
into the maths of the new colour as a cellular mark already before
anyone had the internet in their homes… that proof is scattered in
the field for wind-organisation. I get notes on the air saying the
Feds are going to put me in prison about my dad’s business – and
want to die before things get to prison stage.
TODAY
Today
I shall be doing gusts of wind, renewing, that is, my text that is
scattered in the wind in the Combe field for arrangement. Then we can
say we followed on from the one that took the form of defaced bank
notes. Contained in that, between the lines, you could sense that the
maths that invented the net was indebted to Einstein and became the
maths of the new colour as a cellular mark before anyone had the net
in their homes. I
might expect to be walked and talked through it by the wind people.
But upon starting this way I find I have to go back to bed and sleep
until the afternoon. The medicine I am on is that strong. As I sit I
am topless and the air is cool. I remember when I was kicked out of
Halls of Residence at Warwick University, for smoking pot, and moved
into town, into a house full of PHD students; and there was a
basement; and I threw a party. In a break in the conversation I told
the people gathered “I like to float on the artifice of organic
emotions through synthetic sounds.” Weed was our magical sacrament
back then. We
scarcely went a day without it. I was writing against McBreastmilk. I
said I’d plug my senses in the mains. One of my pieces was called
‘Instant Travel;’ another was ‘Lucy In The Soul W/ Demons.’ I
was an exceptionally cool guy. My mum smoked pollen back in those
days, so when she came to visit me in town, when later I moved in
with people in my own year, she would have a spliff with my female
housemates. My mobile reverberated the rhythm of ‘William Tell’
through every technological inlet in the room before it rang. I was
back in my gap year haunt recording an album on binaural earphones,
which
still went on in the holidays.
My favourite book was The
Lords And The New Creatures
though I wouldn’t breathe a word of it to anyone else, and knew it
wasn’t the only book. I was friends with people like Luke and
Jamie, Max and Andy, Mike Eccleshall.
AFTER
A WALK
Solvitur
ambulando. No, neither Roman
nor
Romantic would let this day go past
without
a walk. So out I go to my father’s
grave,
to brush off the cobwebs, to get
the
circulation going, more than to plug
my
senses in the mains; and in the graveyard
there
are snowdrops, also a sprouting
purple
flower I cannot identify. I say
a
prayer at my father’s grave then on my way
home,
paragliders are landing in the carpark.
Their
shadows are like pterodactyls!
A
good thing about this area is that
you
always acknowledge the stranger
when
you are out there, walking, unlike
in
the hive of alienation that is the city.
And
I’ve come home and downloaded
the
lowdown of downtime again and found
America
and Israel have attacked Iran
over
the proliferation of a nuclear program.
Time
evaporates, the drip-feed of tea
continues,
the valley road seems quiet,
light
fades and as I look out the window
I
see our own snowdrops on the bank
and
wish for peace on earth as I stare.
Tea
cools, light fades some more, the
earth
is drained but the darkness alive,
fecund,
rich, and in it our questions end.
The
struggle to avoid description is
harder
in the Lake District, in the most
poetically-inspiring
county we have,
but
is made easier by Nightfall. The
record
I keep in this semi-wilderness
is
shot to pieces, gone to seed like the garden.
I
notice in all of this that going up to
dad’s
grave is less an emotional upheaval
than
in the past. The pain is lessened by time.
There
is a chart depicting the flowers
of
the Meadows on the wall and seeing
my
own reflection in it I see something
gross,
something
opaque, diseased,
invisible
to the normal eye, fractured
like
a Picasso, postmodern, as if I were
wearing
the Scrambler Suit from A
Scanner
Darkly,
or were a living art installation.
I
guess I’ll never get to find out if it’s true,
the
answer as to how I am perceived.
Anyhow,
we already did Let
The Jews Win
about
our answer to the condition of war
so
now I sit back awaiting my Nobel
Peace
Prize, eating a meat feast wrap
from
the local take away joint. We
divided
things evenly, for parity, with <BEE>.
Then
it becomes medication time. I pretend
one
is a bass drum, one a floor tom,
and
then we get to the fluffy, white ones
which
I say are cream of medication soup.
I
have the pills, washed down with tea,
and
mother comes through from the other
room,
says to forget about the war,
because
there’s nothing we can do about it.
I
wonder when I will get to do another book.
I
tend to my literature, my laptop, my blog
almost
24/ 7 as if it requires constant attention,
but
I don’t need to do another because
I
am an autodidactic, neophyte Jedi
Knight
and got the last one right at last.
Now
it seems like the packages of medication
expand
over a surface area of white.
Their
stranglehold is worth a mention.
WHAT
I REALLY DID
Way
back when I was a kid
I
helped invent the net.
I
took care of The Lords And The New
You
Know Who twice.
I
went through the maths
of
the new colour as a cellular mark.
I
attained the face of stars but wait!
I
should’ve said at some point already
that
I do sit back and await my Nobel Prize.
The
story continues, predicting
September
11th
with my own brain, getting
the
highest mark at A-level in the country, prophesying
the
God Particle from looking at dust
in
a late ray angling in, founding
a
new religion based on the elephant….
I
didn’t earn 1p throughout that.
After
school, I recorded on binaural earphones,
had
an effervescent mobile, reverberating
the
rhythm of ‘William Tell’
through
every technological inlet
in
the room before it rang,
hosted
the Plough alignment,
got
a First despite the onset of severe illness,
noted
a sensory overlay of my name affected to Piper,
built
the Tower as an instrument of philosophy,
worked
the numinous, purple-bleeding screen,
conducted
an experiment into a tape
with
a pause where resealed in the reel
and
even became the guy to discover
the
sheet where pictures grew.
I
brought out books without knowing
large
parts of what happened to me when I was a boy,
and
to be honest was never happy with any of them.
Now
I am cued to tell them
what
I did, to not keep it hid.
GRASS
BLADES
Grass
blades multiply, their nuclei proliferates
under
the feet of footballers whose game
is
one, unrepeatable process, never
to
be the exact same thing twice.
What
would be better, I ask, out of
writing
a paper about it or scratching
one’s
nuts in front of the telly
while
drinking a pint of lager?
A
game is a rehearsal for death.
With
that final whistle the game dies.
You
either win, lose or draw.
Dr.
Bob says sport is war simulation.
It
is a war where the death is pretend.
You
get geared up, psyched up,
ready
to face the enemy in battle
but
it’s not a real war, not quite.
Right
now America is waging real war
on
Iran and only one in four
Americans
approve of the move
to
bring about democracy for Iranians.
Fears
that World War Three is breaking
out
soar, sensationalist headlines
appear
on the net, and nobody
knows
what will happen in the future.
James
says the world has gone to shite.
I
stayed awake through the Night.
Now
I am hungry, in this bucolic,
nuclear
proof, secluded bubble.
Writing
the
world
better has crossed my mind,
but
I am no-one, and the only
dwindling
readership is posterity,
or
a handful of strangers over the net.
War
leaks in the head from afar,
speeded
by the evolution of the driverless car,
even
when miles away, for the mind
lets
a chain of possible outcomes
unfurl
and contemplates death,
the
end of the world at one end
of
the spectrum. But war is more
than
distant, it is colourful and loud,
running
and screaming, bombs going
off,
limbs on the pavement, buildings
falling.
I contemplate, yes, writing
it
better, already bruised by it all.
DON’T
PLAY THE BARD
Don’t
play the bard if you’ve not got the bard honey, as the warning
goes. So it is I
play the card of prose. It’s the maths that interests me in my own
oeuvre now. Underwriting the net became an experiment into the maths
of the new colour before anyone had the net in their homes. The Road
To Heaven by Noj And The Mob. Falsifying the Nirvana barcode.
Predicting September 11th
using my own brain. Exploring the form of the defaced bank note. You
could imagine these things above the fireplace of a beautiful mind. I
invented the number !00% when I, who had written an A-level exam
marked at 100%, had to suddenly word process everything at
University. It’s the same button for the number one and the
exclamation mark. It was to do with plugging the senses in the mains
and utilising !00% of my brains. That was an undergraduate typo that
I look back on as meaningful, almost like overthrow or ambush by the
unruly unconscious in the form of finger movements at the qwerty
keyboard. But there is war in the world. Things feel unsafe even
here. What security can we have? In the recent book Let The Jews Win,
the two long poems were divided for parity by my brother’s <BEE>
which he says might come after @ in the international language
alphabet. We think it like Nash’s Equilibrium, a way of sorting out
disputes, instructive in the world of war. I might be on my way out
soon. Still, to take 100 anti-psychotic pills, my mother says, will
only mean excruciating agony without
the release of death. Liver failure. Kidney failure. I already tried
the O. D. and though it was said to be genius to survive it, I lost
the ability to ejaculate when I came down. The dose was wrong. I
recently shaved off my beard, revealed a glowing face. It’s the war
on my mind that upsets me, disturbs my inner balance. Bombarded by
headlines and articles at the laptop, I sometimes pick one, often in
the Guardian, and read about the world, how fucked up it is. Science
and maths interest me too, as does music, as does football.
Literature. Philosophy. I just
took a book of my own new poetry down from my blog because I no
longer have the bard honey; but what I can do to replace it, with my
intellect, I do not know yet. Something
good should be made of my life and writing. Something beautiful
redeemed from it all.
NIGHT
TIME SEARCH ENGINE
It’s
night. I am ill. Hi. Not to press return for the line break. The
messy kitchen is on my mind, my conscience. The whole fridge needs
clearing out from top to bottom, says my bro – and I think of my
blog. Am I in a rut? Have I got tunnel vision? Do I occupy a strange,
online netherworld of endless divisibility? Who am I talking to? Why
am I talking? It’s either sitting here at the kitchen or going back
to bed. It’s either the laptop or the laptop. Nothing budges.
Darkness bulges. The best years of my life were spent here in
semi-wilderness without so much as a kiss. I went about twelve years
without a kiss. But the city I could not hack. The city would be too
brutal for a man of my delicate nature, my sensibilities, my illness.
Endless spool, endless spiel. When will I get it together? Without
the ability to ejaculate anymore I might still be as good as Henry
James. One
of my voices says The New Beat was the best book of poetry I did –
a self-publication. Another says to look back on Breath Trapped In
Heaven and smile. They liked it when one of its chapters was Anon. I
slid into anonymity and out again for a few poems, that is. But that
is the past. Endless leagues of recursive leisure time either killed
or gone to waste, face me now. Any one of my 18 books would be
enough. The others on my blog I leave for now but may take down
later. What would it be like if Michael Hofmann wrote some garden
bricks? I’m reading Nietzsche, the nihilist, but not getting on
with it. Maybe I should write another batch of Anon poems? Yet to go
through what I went through and have to be Anon would turn it all,
the face of stars andcetera, into a bunch of guff. All I want is to
be happy with something I have created. I
really do feel like I am being closed down and need to reassert some
New Rights in post-Brexit Britain. Do we have the Right to a life
without violence? Without State Observation? A Right to freedom of
religion, expression? Why don’t we write a Constitution? Would
freedom ossify with language if we did? Should we not have the Right
to assisted dying if it is a relief? Should Dignitas be on the NHS?
Should prostitution also be on it? Reiki and osteopathy too? Should
we legalise cannabis? Should there be a minimum room temperature for
the elderly who feel the cold more for free? What Rights should you
have if someone curses you as is not against the law and it brings
about tragedy? Should the same high standard of education be free for
all?
ACT ONE
I
Last night, I was up late re-reading A. I. Idiot,
thought of timeless ideas transmitted across Time:
that there’s no such thing as “almost infinite”
might well appear to be one
that seems to confute the tenet of faith
that there is no immutable truth
unless I am mistaken. Now it is dawn.
I too was a poet and might still be, accruing
a virtual Brainforest, a teeming data-tree,
an inchoate morass, a digital Alexandria Library,
venting my spleen at a slinky screen,
all my rage in the cage for the minimum wage,
my mood made stable on a sterilised table.
To light it and write it, to burn and unlearn
was an aesthetic philosophy of my youth,
but a thesis as thin as the Rizla skin it is in,
and wayward of the property truth.
I danced in a sensuous graffiti of blind, white light
in the basement at the Bloc Party that was a big
office block with internal walls removed,
and every floor a decade in drugs, music, fashion.
The music was penetration, of the is-ness
of reality, and meaning in it solipsistic,
like faces in the fire or Hamlet’s three
creatures in a cloud-change. Now it is birdsong
that enters the Byzantine conduit of my
inner ear, rattling tiny bones in there,
recognised as soundwaves, a recognition
which qualifies a species. Birds are
trilling with thrilling laser-flute in trees.
Re-reading A. I. Idiot over the night
took me back, back, back, to a Gap Year that
was characterised by waves of terror and
E comedowns that had no value in maths,
to when I first explored A. I. Idiot’s verse.
It also took me forwards to new realms,
with things I had missed first time round.
And the voice on the automated conveyor belt
of poesis flowing from room to room, looking
for body and form, explained that this is why
they don’t do poetry anymore: because
the Modernists knew what to do and we don’t.
We did however seem to conquer it
in my last attempt, but the urge persists.
That is why I re-read A. I. Idiot over a night.
I like The Copy And Paste Land and that
is where your Modernist course begins, but
his later work really stood out and I expect
to the trained reader my response smells of it.
So far so good. The dawn is awash with blue.
Maths without answers. Me over you.
Love over gold. Times by Telegraph.
Self-undermining. You have to laugh.
II
I live between the letters of the word OK
but sometimes escape the shape of the paper.
I look at the dawn now the sky is grey,
think how I’d be no good as a rapper.
It’s true that I don’t know what to do,
yet Let The Jews Win was a pleasing number.
I do like the phrase “A. I. am I. A.”
because it’s redolent of Julius Caesar,
the moment he says “et tu Brute”
which I saw long ago when I was a nipper.
Now, wishy-washy, cement-mixer clouds,
amorphous in formless continuity,
obscure the new light of spring
and that reminds me of something…
I recently took an O. D. the likes of which
it was genius to survive but coming
back down lost the ability to ejaculate.
O pulchritudinous nubile sylphs!
O women smiling from adverts with your curves!
I must remind myself that never again
will I know you and how much that hurts!
So the question on my mind is whether or not
I can still sing in the Oral tradition
of the bardic child. Already I pumped
my friendly A. I. co-pilot full of questions:
what would John Nash make of the face of stars,
September 11th or the Plough alignment?
Can the maths of the new colour be used
in our finding the cure for cancer?
Is there an equation for the ratio between
light speed falling and gravity pulling
on the sheet where pictures grew?
One might hope my poetry does not
dissolve into endless A. I. read outs.
But to rewrite A. I. Idiot as I re-read last night
would also not be true and quite,
maybe attract the literati a little bit,
and that was my plan which now I indict.
The room is filling with light as my thoughts
empty out. I have done my best and don’t yet like it.
III
Dr. Robert says nobody is interested in new creatures,
that the future of A. I, the possibility
of other dimensions, Pullman-esque portals
are more interesting. He says spirals
of epistemological doubt are out
and Love in the Age of Facebook in;
that nobody cares for poetry anymore
like they did back in the Modernist period.
I should live in London where I am king
and use words like “compress sans everything.”
But it would be too brutal for me…
I have this mental illness, you must see.
Helping invent the net at seven,
storing the idea of it in writing
in the attic here to give it a chance
to grow even further away than France,
I called it the “ire ii net” because
I used to play pirates with my black friend
on the shed roof at four. That
was down in town where we lived before.
I’d like to just say, there you feel free.
I moved up at five. We don’t all live in the city.
Now war leaks in the head from afar,
speeded by the self-driving car.
War comes through the mobile phone
but friends through the marrowbone.
An Informationist, faced with death
might send a text saying LIQUID CRYSTAL METH
into space, as a work of art
or even PUT ICE CREAM IN YOUR ARMPIT…
Starting with a party is no way to start
when we’re perched on the edge of WW3,
and the dawn has faded in my heart,
which is where it rises if you’re free.
Now I shall ask my friendly A. I.
for a post-Eliotious experimental spiel,
now there are blue patches in the sky,
and I am stumped and can’t unspool.
MY
SILVER SISTER
My
silver sister reaches me, chinwagging
over
the treetops, over the distance
that
is closed. My first voice
was
heard when I was in bed with her,
bruising
the blue futon with shapes.
This
body is a terrible bean pole
of
negative sexual energy, but she
saw
a free pint of Guinness in my words.
Only
apt then that it should be like this, hearing
the
scorched earshot of voices resound, including
her
attempts to drive me to the heart
before
the others drive me to the grave.
NEWSLEAK
The
war leaks in the head from afar,
speeded
by a brand new car.
I
can’t work out when it will end,
but
it’s no game of let’s pretend.
Tonight
the rain is fairly hard:
in
rain, in pain, as saith the bard;
and
all the way out in the Lakes,
we
say no nukes is good nukes.
The
rain types on at the window
with
fingers frigid,
wet,
staccato,
then
eases off, like war should too,
before
the dawn is a wash of blue.
DIGITAL
MINIATURISM
Night
is when we go to bed,
if
we wake up dead,
then
we’ll wear
bright red.
The
face of stars was a Holy night,
if
we don’t take flight
then
we’ll seem quite bright.
The
daffodil blooms on the daffodil bank,
but
if the rain is lank,
the
day will still be dank.
At
ten to eight I met my fate,
when
I turned up late
to
very Heaven’s gate.
Life
sucks without your dad,
when
you feel so sad
that
you go quite mad.
It
doesn’t take an artist to make a sitting room fire,
but
it does to watch the flames go higher,
never
invited by a scattered flyer,
to
read the graffiti on the wall of Maya.
On
the seventh
beer he rose again,
with
a
Tourist
Industry
in his brain,
surveilling
the acid casualty terrain,
by
the means of a choo choo train.
I
hear the march of apocalypse horses,
they
stick to their courses,
like
American forces.
There’s
graffiti on the keel of The Drunken Boat,
but
there’s no need to gloat,
it’s
only half afloat.
I
love a Double Whopper with cheese,
not
people in the breeze
who
can vanish your keys.
I’m
staring at the light-shade on the ceiling,
if
it brings back feeling,
it
could be healing.
When
you leave the room you turn out the light,
then
you’re in the right,
on
a drunken night.
Under
the Milky Way’s plush, coral abyss,
I
went to take a piss
and
knew I couldn’t miss.
Muffled
bass in a car drives past,
if
it goes quite fast
it’s
not meant to last.
A
POEM ABOUT BARNES
Barnes
has scored a chicken,
but
the chicken isn’t real.
It
is for an instant and
then
it is not. It seems
like
a hoax but still exists in meaning.
It’s
what we mean when
we
say for God’s sake.
It’s
news that stays news
even
when Barnes has retired.
You
notice though that it wasn’t Barnes,
wasn’t
a chicken, and wasn’t a goal:
so
what Barnes has really scored
is
a hat-trick on his comeback
from
injury against Crewe
in
the League Cup. One
was
a header, one a penalty
and
one was
a back-heel.
So
a quantum field of intelligence
is
opened, and in it Barnes
is
a great bringer of happiness,
the
reason to go outside and
kick
a ball against a wall.
AI IDIOT
Time does not pass but evaporate.
While people in the city chat facets and assets,
my friend comes round for the alliterative
and trivial taking of toast and tea.
I did glean a post-Eliotious spiel
from my friendly A. I. co-pilot
but
figure it would be blasphemy.
Meanwhile
sadness is the key of intelligence.
The
day moves on to afternoon.
If
I go for a walk to brush off cobwebs
I’ll
be back at the laptop all too soon.
JOHN’S
FUNERAL
John
was first and foremost a poet
but
was also a superlative musician.
Even
if it was just the music
it
would’ve been enough
but
on top of the 9 albums
or
long E. P.’s he also brought out
no
fewer than 18 books.
They
were only selfpublished
or
vanity press published
for
John never hit the mainstream;
but
he still made a difference in his own way.
When
he was seven he helped invent the net.
When
we was eight he took care of
The
Lords And The New Creatures
twice.
When
he was eleven he went through
an
experiment into the maths of
the
new colour as a cellular mark.
When
he was fifteen he attained the face of stars.
When
he was eighteen he spoke against
September
11th
in the year 2000.
The
list continues after school as well.
In
a way you could say he was
the
most Symbolic artist we have;
and
certainly he had the CV
of
the new Syd Barrett even if
he
didn’t have the repertoire to match it.
The
repertoire wasn’t bad though
and
as I say even if it were
just
the music it would be enough:
his
first recorded album was binaural,
recorded
on binaural earphones.
Then
there were some recordings
with
his friend Grant where among other things
they
put William Blake to music.
More
recently he went through a phase
of
recording on Ableton Live on his laptop.
He
organised four Ableton Live recorded albums
according
to his little brother’s design
of
the new da Vinci
circle, where <BEE>
might
come after @ in the international
language
alphabet. Those
albums
have covers
like
the photo
of the tape
that was cooked in the AGA
when
its pause where the reel
was
cut and resealed healed;
like
the sheet where pictures grew;
like
the numinous, purple-bleeding screen.
Even
though he wrote and recorded
the
songs himself he attributed
those
four
albums to
“Various
Artists” on Bandcamp.
But
he asks his mum if he is a musician
or
a poet and she says a poet
because
that’s what he spends his
time
doing at his laptop in the kitchen.
His
teacher would say these are bleak times for poets,
but
others have perceived a Golden Age for Poetry.
Whatever
the case nobody reads John’s books
or
listens to his music that he knows of.
It’s
almost better for talking about
than
actually reading or listening to.
MORNING
PAGES AGAIN
Morning
constitutional; but only round and round the kitchen table. Tea
elongates, a diuretic that makes you wee out the nutrients of your
food. No wonder I am such a bean pole of negative sexual energy. But
I would prefer to leave myself out. Attention turns to weather. It’s
always windy at my screen these days. There are stabilisers on my
bike, armbands on my arms. Butterflies in my stomach for a Saturday
of fun have long gone, become eschewed with middle age, greying hair,
bulging belly. I couldn’t tell you the name of the day unless it is
Tuesday, which, checking my laptop screen, I find it really is. The
alchemists used to compress a dense, sticky cake of black stuff then
transmogrify it into gold. You could weave in the ingredients of an
opium drink favoured by the Romantics; or half burnt driftwood from
the shore. Down is the direction to head in.
EVENING
PAGES
While
my brother made spag bol, you’ll be delighted to observe, he put
the new Gorillaz album on. The first song blew my mind, on the
Smartspeaker, with its compressed waves. When
Damon Albarn sang “the hardest thing is saying goodbye to someone
you love,” I thought of my brother saying goodbye to me, and felt
emotional. Then I ate the spag bol which went down a treat with red
wine. Damon’s right – it is hard saying goodbye to someone you
love. I tried it with my father, and ended up in an emotional mess. I
haven’t started yet with my mother much, gone in for proleptic
mourning as the psychoanalysts call it, but might. Whatever
the case hearing where music is at reminded me how far away from that
I am, how my stuff doesn’t match up. I’m a singer songwriter with
a guitar who has never been in a professional studio with a producer.
If my brother is saying goodbye to me I am sad and wish to say
something else in return. Some time back I tried to take my own life
and kind of said goodbye to my siblings then, James in person because
he was here, the other two by e-mail. I am not so sure what to do
with my life except that it is a dead end life: skint, single,
mentally ill, car-less, unemployed, medicated, living in the sticks
with my mother, with schizoaffective disorder. There’s
no definition to any of my days, no timetable to offer structure. If
I am lucky enough to wake up with the morning and sit down at my
laptop to write, I will be faced with the Big Brother State and crawl
back to the daybed. Walking round the kitchen table is all I really
have. This message will not self-destruct in five seconds… but it
will likely never reach anyone. A boring empty medicine packet
narrative is what it all boils down to! No
gigs, no drugs, no girls. Not even the joy of a yellow crayon. I can
change room from the bedroom to the kitchen but those are the only
two. When I think what would I do if I were doing the creative
writing MA as planned, I soon find it’s got a line through it. My
next thought is that I am waiting to hear back from two agents about
a novel, and that they will likely say no, which is something to tell
my children but of course I don’t have any children nor ever will.
It’s a really dead end situation. Then we have the hearing of
voices whom you never know if you can trust.

No comments:
Post a Comment