Book Read Free

To the Occupant

Page 5

by Emma Neale

courageous

  for so costly

  so ruinous

  such closeness

  apart.

  The TastiTM Taste Guarantee

  At Tasti, our team are extremely proud of our delicious range of quality products, so if you think we could have done something better, or if there is anything you would like to know, please write …

  Dear Team

  Thanks for the invitation.

  I’ve just eaten one of your peanut-butter-flavoured Mega Nuts bars and I think you

  could have made the packaging less enticing.

  Because I wasn’t intending to eat your product—I was saving it for the kids.

  And now I can feel the sticky caramel on my teeth, an odd sort of syrupy aftertaste

  of disappointment and gooey popcorn, and I’m writing this while deeply aware

  of the middle-aged pizza dough roll over my jogging shorts, and of my increasingly

  care-worn so-called willpower.

  One bar is 10 per cent of my average daily calorie allowance.

  I am profligate. I am ill-disciplined.

  I am quite possibly your ideal clientele:

  the kind who still partly believes that a muesli bar

  is vaguely Swiss and healthy;

  who thinks she can put your product in the kids’ lunch boxes

  and it will be both wholesome and exciting;

  it will make them feel nurtured, central, and remembered;

  it will encourage them to think of me fondly

  when I am (body willing) in my eighties

  counting the minutes till I can have another coffee

  waiting for whatever sound postal delivery makes

  in the non-dystopic future that many of us cling to

  when seeing the thin blue lines on the pregnancy test stick

  hoping right from that moment

  that somewhere out there in the hurtling planet’s

  VibroTM cities that survive because we all learnt

  to recycle, conserve water, use cook-pots and screens

  powered by the sun, the kids will sense

  their prefrontal cerebral cortexes tingle and waltz

  with the memory of opening the old ice-cream containers

  we used as lunch boxes when the stupid flick-flack side-wing locks

  on the expensive brand-name job-specific lunch boxes broke

  and there, in its pack with the silver foil underskin

  that shakes in the light like the sequins on a debut dancer’s tutu,

  was the chewy rectangle of protein and processed carbohydrates,

  an understudy of mother’s and father’s love

  that finally gets the chance to fill in and shine …

  and so the kids will write. Or call by. Or ring.

  All of which I guess

  is just to say

  (hey WCW! Still got it!)

  since you asked, I would like to know

  how close-grained and sweet-glazed

  is the happiness of the future

  assuming there is happiness in the future?

  Because sometimes, when I catch a glimpse

  of time’s webbed, oil-black wings,

  its tangerine-stained, crazed-bullet teeth,

  I’m so stunned and dread-run that even eating

  a candy bar in Supergrain disguise

  seems to be the opposite of inaction.

  Dear Old Diaries

  I’m sorry it’s been so long.

  Sorry I dumped all that on you.

  I suppose you know I shredded and burnt one of you

  in the aftermath of the bad lover

  I wished had undergone a personality transplant?

  Poor dead diary, punching bag, scratching post, voodoo doll,

  ritual sacrifice, little strips blackening and bending,

  contorted like small mouths howling in the waste-bin flames …

  Also, I guess you know that I mislaid one of you

  when we moved house, twelve years ago?

  It’s bizarre how things turn out.

  I mean, here I am, the long, slow reveal,

  the ‘in-the-middle-of (I hope) the-journey-of-my-life-

  I-came-to-myself-within-a (please let it be only one) dark-wood’,

  the nameless abstract future

  that once seemed to peer down

  over the biro’s gnomon shadow

  through time’s clear, curved bell jar

  as if to find itself in the fine print:

  and now mainly noticing

  not the creak and labour of history,

  the wonky frocks and bad habits, teen kicks,

  blitherous superstitions, or made-for-TV morality—

  but that little tousled head, bent as if in prayer;

  though really more like a cat entranced

  by the moving hieroglyphs of peculiar blue ants:

  inky trails that lead to where it couldn’t fathom,

  still can’t.

  Joy

  Do not use somersaults!

  Remove all sharp objects from jumper!

  Do not use when smoking!

  Do not use with high blood pressure!

  Do not use during pregnancy!

  Do not use when suffering!

  Use only bare foots!

  Chain Mail

  Bernie Gluckman, Texas

  Daniel Luton, Balclutha

  Cheryl Briar, Stoke Newington

  Elif Smith, Istanbul

  Emma Neale, Dunedin

  Dear one

  This charm has been created in the name of hope.

  It will protect you like armour if you pass it on.

  If you don’t, we cannot be blamed for what fate befalls you.

  One woman read this poem and passed it on.

  Luck came to her in the form of many book vouchers, sympathetic friends,

  and a shortlisting in an award with a cash prize.

  Another woman read this poem but failed to pass it on.

  We regret to say that the soul collector came to her in the night.

  It lay beneath her bed, and, when she slept, checked the recycling bin for the poem,

  found it there, then plucked the woman’s soul for its dark album.

  A man read this poem and he intended to pass it on, but left it in his briefcase

  on a train. The train derailed, and the briefcase was destroyed. This man’s full fate

  is really too melancholy to relate, given—as is often the case with poems—you may

  be reading deep in the marrow of night, with just a small desk lamp dozing

  in its night cap for company beside you …

  So let us add emollient here to that burning urge to know the truth, and add that

  further persons of fluid gender read this poem, circulated it, and to them came great

  prosperity and—it must be said—many more wild and unaccountable poems.

  Our advice is this. Within three days, make a copy of this poem, with your name at

  the bottom of the list that begins it. Wrap the page around another poem of your own

  as a charitable gift to the person named at the top of the list. (Now cross out that

  name.) Circulate this poem to five more friends.

  Within ten days, your actions will have brought you bewilderment, laughter, curiosity, conversation, hope, and an abundance of poems.*

  Will you strengthen the chain of human involvement? You must decide.

  For with this last line, the charm is cast.

  * (How many exactly will depend on postal services in your area.)

  Dear Future, I’m afraid this is how I begin to lose you

  I pictured a life jacket but I could only say diving gear.

  I couldn’t find a knife because my hands thought of spoons.

  I wanted to slip away though I sang Where’s the book?

  I hunted for my wallet when I meant to recall the years.

  I worried at the probl
em, but he could only see solutions:

  when he said Can you please explain?

  my reply was ghosting strangers on the stairs.

  He wondered aloud if I even knew his name

  yet at the sight of his bowed neck

  regret finned to the evening’s surface,

  blue koi flickering at the stippling of rain.

  Postcards Just Won’t Cut It

  Dear old man holding his cane halfway down like a marching baton, scything the air the way a child swings a stick at long, wild grass

  Dear slightly floury, cottony February peach that helps us remember, wrist-dripping, shirt-staining real peaches

  Dear exasperated established senior male author who thinks Track Changes are hell on earth but who keeps trying because of the indomitable human spirit plus deadlines

  Dear little boy having his first day at a new educational programme, who had to roll a dice ten times this morning to make a decision, and who hides his head under a favorite bed-sheet he takes all around the house, and who likes to caress the small rabbit’s ears he fashions out of the two best corners

  Dear elderly, thin woman speed-walking like a stalk of lavender blown along upright in a great wind

  Dear creased white net curtain billowing and reminding me of another botched poem with a white net curtain billowing which reminded me then of my father’s death and which even now makes me want to cradle his mid-thirties wet swimming-pool head from that ’70s photo where he embraces my little sister, his goofy grin as if he’s the benign human incarnation of a bear with its stomach full of salmon

  Dear patterned steeplechase of light and shade through the creeper, the deck fencing, the ranch-slider, now showing up on the sandy, crumby, balding rug

  Dear man who can hold my gaze now though I suspect it was something close to prideful, and so therefore shameful, in his background, which in fact we have never discussed

  Dear woman whose colour sense in everything from intricate stitchwork to what dishcloth and coffeepot should sit side by side is like an optical cadenza

  Dear twig from the Bullock Track used as a bookmark in Knausgaard’s A Man in Love

  Dear hash brown chef of the hashtag generation

  Dear eight-year-old yodelling loudly in the Botanic Garden toilets to voodoo away ghosts, spiders and bogey men and exiting again with a soap-foam beard

  Dear small girl with a tiara over her baseball cap and lime-green sandals snap-domed with silver Mercury wings

  Dear crank caller, too shy to even dial the number, but composing devastating witticisms under his breath on the bus

  Dear middle-aged man on unexpected weight-loss bout caused by love for another man’s life, no that’s not a typo for wife

  Dear teenager plodding uphill dreaming of swimming from shore to shore and wanting to be reincarnated as music

  Dear strand of jazz piano falling through the air like a string of silver lights

  How I wish

  I could stay

  Economy of Style

  Due to circumstances

  we should have foreseen

  the exquisite poems

  we had hoped for

  have not been composed.

  We regret to say

  until further notice

  this space remains closed.

  Envoi

  Reader, wait up!

  Please, don’t turn away like that.

  I’m sure we can work this out.

  Let’s just sit here a while,

  feel the light pour

  like silent cataracts,

  its radiant wash joining us,

  two dots of consciousness

  particles we might name

  the Vladimirs and Estragons

  of trust.

  Acknowledgements and Notes

  Thanks are due to the editors of the following publications where some of these works (or versions of them) have appeared or are forthcoming: Angry Old Man (US); A Poetry Shelf for Paula Green; Bath Flash Fiction Anthology 2018 (UK); Bridport Prize Anthology 2018 (UK); The Cerurove (US); The Friday Poem: 100 New Zealand poems (Luncheon Sausage Books, 2018); Geometry; HeadStuff (Ireland); Landfall; London Grip (UK); NB Magazine; NZ Poetry Shelf; Otago Daily Times; Phantom Billstickers poetry posters; Poetry Daily (US); Poetry Ireland Review; Poetry New Zealand Yearbook 2018; Reflex Flash Fiction; The Spinoff; Sport; Verbatim Found Poetry; and Ware Poets Prize Anthology 2018 (UK).

  ‘The Appointment’ was longlisted in the Summer Reflex Fiction International Competition 2018. ‘Still’ and ‘Mère-mare’ were both shortlisted in the 2017 Bridport Prize Poetry category, judged by Lemn Sissay; and ‘Courtship’ was highly commended in the 2018 Bridport Prize Flash Fiction category, judged by Monica Ali.

  ‘Dear Future, I’m afraid this is how I begin to lose you’ was shortlisted in the National Memory Day Competition, UK, November 2018. ‘Doorway’ was commended in the Ware Poets Open Competition, UK, 2018. ‘The Local Pool’ won third place in the Bath Flash Fiction Award 2018, judged by Nuala O’Connor (Nuala Ní Chonchúir).

  ‘So Buttoned Up’ was selected for Best New Zealand Poems 2018 (edited by Fiona Farrell), IIML.

  ‘Withdrawn’ was originally commissioned for the ‘Poets on Place’ event at the Dunedin Writers & Readers Festival 2017, produced by Ian Loughran.

  ‘Letter from tomorrow’s tomorrow and tomorrow’ was originally prompted by Tautitotito (Disputation Songs): Other genealogies of Aotearoa New Zealand music (2018), produced by Alex Taylor and Celeste Oram. The producers asked for letters ‘written in a speculative future and addressed to the present day’ to address several questions, one of which was ‘How has music and sound shaped the histories of Aotearoa New Zealand, and how will it continue to shape our futures?’

  ‘So Buttoned Up’ uses the two opening lines from Stephen Bett’s ‘For Love of You’ as its own opening lines. ‘my mother in this way mixing me wings and tongue’ takes its title from a couplet in ‘Red’, by Paula Green, from her book Chrome (Auckland University Press, Auckland, 2000).

  ‘Joy’ is a treated found poem; the text is rearranged from a Big Bounce Trampoline safety notice.

  Grateful acknowledgement is also due to Creative New Zealand, who funded me to write a novel, part of which rebelled and ran off into poems.

 

 

 


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