New Selected Poems (1988-2013)

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New Selected Poems (1988-2013) Page 11

by Seamus Heaney


  Bronze reins astream in his right, his gaze ahead

  Empty as the space where the team should be,

  His eyes-front, straight-backed posture like my own

  Doing physio in the corridor, holding up

  As if once more I’d found myself in step

  Between two shafts, another’s hand on mine,

  Each slither of the share, each stone it hit

  Registered like a pulse in the timbered grips.

  Miracle

  Not the one who takes up his bed and walks

  But the ones who have known him all along

  And carry him in –

  Their shoulders numb, the ache and stoop deeplocked

  In their backs, the stretcher handles

  Slippery with sweat. And no let-up

  Until he’s strapped on tight, made tiltable

  And raised to the tiled roof, then lowered for healing.

  Be mindful of them as they stand and wait

  For the burn of the paid-out ropes to cool,

  Their slight lightheadedness and incredulity

  To pass, those ones who had known him all along.

  Human Chain

  for Terence Brown

  Seeing the bags of meal passed hand to hand

  In close-up by the aid workers, and soldiers

  Firing over the mob, I was braced again

  With a grip on two sack corners,

  Two packed wads of grain I’d worked to lugs

  To give me purchase, ready for the heave –

  The eye-to-eye, one-two, one-two upswing

  On to the trailer, then the stoop and drag and drain

  Of the next lift. Nothing surpassed

  That quick unburdening, backbreak’s truest payback,

  A letting go which will not come again.

  Or it will, once. And for all.

  The Baler

  All day the clunk of a baler

  Ongoing, cardiac-dull,

  So taken for granted

  It was evening before I came to

  To what I was hearing

  And missing: summer’s richest hours

  As they had been to begin with,

  Fork-lifted, sweated-through

  And nearly rewarded enough

  By the giddied-up race of a tractor

  At the end of the day

  Last-lapping a hayfield.

  But what I also remembered

  As woodpigeons sued at the edge

  Of thirty gleaned acres

  And I stood inhaling the cool

  In a dusk eldorado

  Of mighty cylindrical bales

  Was Derek Hill’s saying,

  The last time he sat at our table,

  He could bear no longer to watch

  The sun going down

  And asking please to be put

  With his back to the window.

  Eelworks

  I

  To win the hand of the princess

  What tasks the youngest son

  Had to perform!

  For me, the first to come a-courting

  In the fish factor’s house,

  It was to eat with them

  An eel supper.

  II

  Cut of diesel oil in evening air,

  Tractor engines in the clinker-built

  Deep-bellied boats,

  Landlubbers’ craft,

  Heavy in water

  As a cow down in a drain,

  The men straight-backed,

  Standing firm

  At stern and bow –

  Horse-and-cart men, really,

  Glad when the adze-dressed keel

  Cleaved to the mud.

  Rum-and-peppermint men too

  At the counter later on

  In her father’s pub.

  III

  That skin Alfie Kirkwood wore

  At school, sweaty-lustrous, supple

  And bisected into tails

  For the tying of itself around itself –

  For strength, according to Alfie.

  Who would ease his lapped wrist

  From the flap-mouthed cuff

  Of a jerkin rank with eel oil,

  The abounding reek of it

  Among our summer desks

  My first encounter with the up close

  That had to be put up with.

  IV

  Sweaty-lustrous too

  The butt of the freckled

  Elderberry shoot

  I made a rod of,

  A-fluster when I felt

  Not tugging but a trailing

  On the line, not the utter

  Flip-stream frolic-fish

  But a foot-long

  Slither of a fellow,

  A young eel, greasy grey

  And rightly wriggle-spined,

  Not yet the blueblack

  Slick-backed waterwork

  I’d live to reckon with,

  My old familiar

  Pearl-purl

  Selkie-streaker.

  V

  ‘That tree,’ said Walter de la Mare

  (Summer in his rare, recorded voice

  So I could imagine

  A lawn beyond French windows

  And downs in the middle distance)

  ‘That tree, saw it once

  Struck by lightning … The bark –’

  In his accent the ba-aak –

  ‘The bark came off it

  Like a girl taking off her petticoat.’

  White linen éblouissante

  In a breath of air,

  Sylph-flash made flesh,

  Eelwork, sea-salt and dish cloth

  Getting a first hold,

  Then purchase for the thumb nail

  And the thumb

  Under a v-nick in the neck,

  The skinpeel drawing down

  Like silk

  At a practised touch.

  VI

  On the hoarding and the signposts

  ‘Lough Neagh Fishermen’s Co-operative’,

  But ever on our lips and at the weir

  ‘The eelworks’.

  The Riverbank Field

  after Virgil, Aeneid, vi, 704–15, 748–51

  Ask me to translate what Loeb gives as

  ‘In a retired vale … a sequestered grove’

  And I’ll confound the Lethe in Moyola

  By coming through Back Park down from Grove Hill

  Across Long Rigs on to the riverbank –

  Which way, by happy chance, will take me past

  The domos placidas, ‘those peaceful homes’

  Of Upper Broagh. Moths then on evening water

  It would have to be, not bees in sunlight,

  Midge veils instead of lily beds; but stet

  To all the rest: the willow leaves

  Elysian-silvered, the grass so fully fledged

  And unimprinted it can’t not conjure thoughts

  Of passing spirit-troops, animae, quibus altera fato

  Corpora debentur, ‘spirits,’ that is,

  ‘To whom second bodies are owed by fate’.

  And now to continue, as enjoined to often,

  ‘In my own words’:

  ‘All these presences

  Once they have rolled time’s wheel a thousand years

  Are summoned here to drink the river water

  So that memories of this underworld are shed

  And soul is longing to dwell in flesh and blood

  Under the dome of the sky.’

  Route 110

  for Anna Rose

  I

  In a stained front-buttoned shopcoat –

  Sere brown piped with crimson –

  Out of the Classics bay into an aisle

  Smelling of dry rot and disinfectant

  She emerges, absorbed in her coin-count,

  Eyes front, right hand at work

  In the slack marsupial vent

  Of her change-pocket, thinking what to charge
r />   For a used copy of Aeneid VI.

  Dustbreath bestirred in the cubicle mouth

  I inhaled as she slid my purchase

  Into a deckle-edged brown paper bag.

  II

  Smithfield Market Saturdays. The pet shop

  Fetid with droppings in the rabbit cages,

  Melodious with canaries, green and gold,

  But silent now as birdless Lake Avernus.

  I hurried on, shortcutting to the buses,

  Parrying the crush with my bagged Virgil,

  Past booths and the jambs of booths with their displays

  Of canvas schoolbags, maps, prints, plaster plaques,

  Feather dusters, artificial flowers,

  Then racks of suits and overcoats that swayed

  When one was tugged from its overcrowded frame

  Like their owners’ shades close-packed on Charon’s barge.

  III

  Once the driver wound a little handle

  The destination names began to roll

  Fast-forward in their panel, and everything

  Came to life. Passengers

  Flocked to the kerb like agitated rooks

  Around a rookery, all go

  But undecided. At which point the inspector

  Who ruled the roost in bus station and bus

  Separated and directed everybody

  By calling not the names but the route numbers,

  And so we scattered as instructed, me

  For Route 110, Cookstown via Toome and Magherafelt.

  IV

  Tarpaulin-stiff, coal-black, sharp-cuffed as slate,

  The standard-issue railway guard’s long coat

  I bought once second-hand: suffering its scourge

  At the neck and wrists was worth it even so

  For the dismay I caused by doorstep night arrivals,

  A creature of cold blasts and flap-winged rain.

  And then, come finer weather, up and away

  To Italy, in a wedding guest’s bargain suit

  Of finest weave, loose-fitting, summery, grey

  As Venus’ doves, hotfooting it with the tanned expats

  Up their Etruscan slopes to a small brick chapel

  To find myself the one there most at home.

  V

  Venus’ doves? Why not McNicholls’ pigeons

  Out of their pigeon holes but homing still?

  They lead unerringly to McNicholls’ kitchen

  And a votive jampot on the dresser shelf.

  So reach me not a gentian but stalks

  From the bunch that stood in it, each head of oats

  A silvered smattering, each individual grain

  Wrapped in a second husk of glittering foil

  They’d saved from chocolate bars, then pinched and cinched

  ‘To give the wee altar a bit of shine.’

  The night old Mrs Nick, as she was to us,

  Handed me one it as good as lit me home.

  VI

  It was the age of ghosts. Of hand-held flashlamps.

  Lights moving at a distance scried for who

  And why: whose wake, say, in which house on the road

  In that direction – Michael Mulholland’s the first

  I attended as a full participant,

  Sitting up until the family rose

  Like strangers to themselves and us. A wake

  Without the corpse of their own dear ill-advised

  Sonbrother swimmer, lost in the Bristol Channel.

  For three nights we kept conversation going

  Around the waiting trestles. By the fourth

  His coffin, with the lid on, was in place.

  VII

  The corpse house then a house of hospitalities

  Right through the small hours, the ongoing card game

  Interrupted constantly by rounds

  Of cigarettes on plates, biscuits, cups of tea,

  The antiphonal recital of known events

  And others rare, clandestine, undertoned.

  Apt pupil in their night school, I walked home

  On the last morning, my clothes as smoke-imbued

  As if I’d fed a pyre, accompanied to the gable

  By the mother, to point out a right of way

  Across their fields, into our own back lane,

  And absolve me thus formally of trespass.

  VIII

  As one when the month is young sees a new moon

  Fading into daytime, again it is her face

  At the dormer window, her hurt still new,

  My look behind me hurried as I unlock,

  Switch on, rev up, pull out and drive away

  In the car she’ll not have taken her eyes off,

  The brakelights flicker-flushing at the corner

  Like red lamps swung by RUC patrols

  In the small hours on pre-Troubles roads

  After dances, after our holdings on

  And holdings back, the necking

  And nay-saying age of impurity.

  IX

  And what in the end was there left to bury

  Of Mr Lavery, blown up in his own pub

  As he bore the primed device and bears it still

  Mid-morning towards the sun-admitting door

  Of Ashley House? Or of Louis O’Neill

  In the wrong place the Wednesday they buried

  Thirteen who’d been shot in Derry? Or of bodies

  Unglorified, accounted for and bagged

  Behind the grief cordons: not to be laid

  In war graves with full honours, nor in a separate plot

  Fired over on anniversaries

  By units drilled and spruce and unreconciled.

  X

  Virgil’s happy shades in pure blanched raiment

  Contend on their green meadows, while Orpheus

  Weaves among them, sweeping strings, aswerve

  To the pulse of his own playing and to avoid

  The wrestlers, dancers, runners on the grass.

  Not unlike a sports day in Bellaghy,

  Slim Whitman’s wavering tenor amplified

  Above sparking dodgems, flying chair-o-planes,

  A mile of road with parked cars in the twilight

  And teams of grown men stripped for action

  Going hell for leather until the final whistle,

  Leaving stud-scrapes on the pitch and on each other.

  XI

  Those evenings when we’d just wait and watch

  And fish. Then the evening the otter’s head

  Appeared in the flow, or was it only

  A surface-ruck and gleam we took for

  An otter’s head? No doubting, all the same,

  The gleam, a turnover warp in the black

  Quick water. Or doubting the solid ground

  Of the riverbank field, twilit and a-hover

  With midge-drifts, as if we had commingled

  Among shades and shadows stirring on the brink

  And stood there waiting, watching,

  Needy and ever needier for translation.

  XII

  And now the age of births. As when once

  At dawn from the foot of our back garden

  The last to leave came with fresh-plucked flowers

  To quell whatever smells of drink and smoke

  Would linger on where mother and child were due

  Later that morning from the nursing home,

  So now, as a thank-offering for one

  Whose long wait on the shaded bank has ended,

  I arrive with my bunch of stalks and silvered heads

  Like tapers that won’t dim

  As her earthlight breaks and we gather round

  Talking baby talk.

  Wraiths

  for Ciaran Carson

  I Sidhe

  She took me into the ground, the spade-marked

  Clean-cut inside of a dugout

  Meant for calves.

  Dung on the floor, a
damp gleam

  And seam of sand like white gold

  In the earth wall, nicked fibres in the roof.

  We stood under the hill, out of the day

  But faced towards the daylight, holding hands,

  Inhaling the excavated bank.

  Zoom in over our shoulders,

  A tunnelling shot that accelerates and flares.

  Discover us against weird brightness. Cut.

  II Parking Lot

  We were wraiths in the afternoon.

  The bus had stopped. There was neither waiting room

  Nor booth nor bench, only a parking lot

  Above the town, open as a hillfort,

  A panned sky and a light wind blowing.

  We were on our way to the Gaeltacht,

 

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