And was it wonderful?
Well, at the time I was one hour and twenty minutes on the planet and mostly concerned with figuring out how there was two of me. But in the coverless edition of The Compleat Angler (Book 900, Chatto & Windus, London) that smells not so much of fish but certainly of yearning, Izaak Walton says angling is just like poetry, and so that’s how I picture it. He had one.
I’ve read dozens of interviews and accounts that basically come down to How Poets Do It and the truth is they’re all do-lally and they’re all different. There’s Gerard Manley Hopkins in his black Jesuit clothes lying face down on the ground to look at an individual bluebell, Robert Frost who never used a desk, was once caught short by a poem coming and wrote it on the sole of his shoe, T.S. Eliot in his I’m-not-a-Poet suit with his solid sensible available-for-poetry three hours a day, Ted Hughes folded into his tiny cubicle at the top of the stairs where there is no window, no sight or smell of earth or animal but the rain clatter on the roof bows him to the page, Pablo Neruda who grandly declared poetry should only ever be handwritten, and then added his own little bit of bonkers by saying: in green ink. Poets are their own nation. Most of them know. Philip Larkin, writing from Belfast to his Dearest of Burrow-dwellers, My Dear Bunny, told how he bought a shilling’s-worth of mistletoe and was walking home with it to his flat, feeling jolly and like the reformed Scrooge, then noticed that the dark-coated, to-the-chin-buttoned, people of Belfast were all staring at him, the Blossom Carrier, as if they expected at any moment he might erotically explode.
They are a parish of peculiars, poets. But they all generally agree, a poem is a precarious thing. It is almost never landed clean and whole in one go. Virgil had a bite, one phrase, that’s all. But he wouldn’t let it go, and because poetry is basically where seeing meets sound, he said the phrase aloud now. He said it aloud and tramped it along the riverbank, said it again the moment he finished saying it and found in repetition was solace of a kind. In the dull consistency of the beat was that universal comfort babies know and people forget. He teased the line, waiting for the next movement. When it didn’t come he said the first line over. He didn’t give up. The sensation was so new and in it the certainty that this was something that he kept at it, and was still crossing over and back on the mucked strip beside the river when Father Tipp came looking for him in order to arrange the date for the baptisms.
Father Tipp was glad to see my father was praying. He heard the murmuring on the breeze, saw the head-bent pacing, and was consoled that though Virgil Swain was not a frequenter of his church fatherhood had now returned him to God. This would make easier the task that had troubled him in our kitchen, namely how to save Aeney and my souls before his annual holiday home to Tipperary.
Not knowing the fields Father Tipp missed the track, crossed Ryan’s not Mac’s, and so laboured through muck and plop, waving an arm at my father that he might see him and shorten the journey. But Virgil saw nothing, so absorbed was he in his prayers, and Father Tipp had to carry on, neat black Clarks size sevens having a little brown baptism of their own and the heat of his effort bringing the midges.
‘Hello? Hello there?’
He did another big drowning-man wave, smacked too late the first triple bites on his forehead.
‘Virgil? Hello?’
Still my father didn’t see or hear him. By the time Father Tipp crossed the loose rusting wire on random sticks the Ryans favoured as fencing, catching his inner trouser leg a twang, he could hear the praying and thought what he was seeing was Pentecostal.
Father Tipp was still young then, Shock and Awe still belonged to the vocabulary of the cloth and the Church was not yet in the toilet as Sean Mathews said. He was still inclined towards the miraculous, and came along the bank believing he was seeing what in fact he believed. Or believed that he believed. It’s a vicious circle.
‘Virgil?’
My father didn’t stop. He kept on, pacing and repeating, pacing and repeating, until, with a purple flush of authority, Father T stepped at last into the way of the poem. ‘A word?’ he said, hands behind his back, eyebrows up and face pinched, more or less exactly the way Timothy Moynihan did in Faha Hall when he was playing the Vicar in that English farce and Susan Brady opened the door with her knickers in her hand.
Father Tipp realised in an instant the awfulness of his intrusion, knew when he saw my father’s eyes flash, Virgil stopping sharp, falling silent. There was a moment of acute diffidence, as though they were high-standing bishops of different flocks. Because by then he knew that what he had heard was not after all a prayer.
‘Father.’
Briefly the priest considered his shoes, and the moment he did the toes of them lifted slightly from the suck muck and his heart fell. West Clare was just not Tipperary. ‘I was wondering if I might have a word?’
‘Yes, Father?’ My father looked dazed.
Father Tipp compensated for self-consciousness by bubbling. ‘Well, isn’t it marvellous? It is. Marvellous now. Twins. You had no idea, I’m told? No. No but marvellous now.’ A penance of midges came to his brow. He went after them with a white linen handkerchief. ‘Warm, isn’t it? Close. Terribly close.’
The two men stood and considered the closeness. ‘Not good this time of year the farmers tell me,’ Father Tipp said, and ran a finger round the inside of his collar.
Silently my father was repeating the phrases of the poem just departing.
‘Not that I understand why exactly,’ the priest said. He kept the hanky handy. Father Tipp was and still is a man skilled in the art of avoidance, black-belt level at the cryptic, but the heat of what he had to propose was making a glistening Here Midges landing strip of his forehead. ‘They’re not like this in Tipperary,’ he said and dabbed, letting the sorrow of his exile air before chancing a first proper glance at my father. ‘Momentous day for you. Of course it is. Of course it is.’ He watched the river run. ‘Yes.’ The midges took a moment to regroup. This time they came to his moisture moustache. He flicked the hanky at the air as if giving a kind of general dispensation.
‘Well,’ he said at last, ‘I’ll be off. Just wanted to say my congratulations.’ He didn’t risk a handshake, but turned, took three steps and shot one hand upwards so his departing benediction was backwards. ‘God bless.’
He got five yards down the bank when he stopped, shook his head in this performance of contrariness, and turned back. ‘I nearly forgot,’ he said. ‘The baptisms?’
‘What?’
‘I’m actually away week after this. How will we? I wonder. No. Could we maybe? No. No no. I suppose not. Only . . .’ A black diary had appeared in his hand. ‘We couldn’t . . . ?’
‘We’ll do it now,’ my father said.
‘What? No. That’s not . . .’
But before he could finish his sentence my father had taken one of Ryan’s buckets and, slurp, dipped it in the river to clean it out, slurp, dipped it again, and was now carrying it slapping and brim-spilling back across the field towards the house.
Or so the mythology goes.
‘Virgil, no. I didn’t mean. There’s no need for . . .’
‘We’ll do it now,’ my father said again. He was already past the priest, going the easier track home, and Father Tipp was already hurrying after, already wondering what the hell had happened, in the confusing cloud of his midges trying to figure out where in his strategy the error had occurred. ‘Stop! Wait a minute,’ he called, knowing that my father would not stop or wait a minute.
‘I won’t do it,’ the priest said.
‘Then I will.’
And he would. That was one thing Father Tipp said he knew. Everyone in the parish knew Virgil Swain enough by then to know that when he made a decision, no matter how ill-advised, mulish, in fact ass-backward as Seanie the Yank says, he stuck to it. So as Father Tipp came scampering after him he had to change tack, hurry through the broad headings of the Act and its Consequences: on the one hand the fact that this would mean the bap
tisms were done, on the other it would not be in the church; on the one hand he would be enlisting two more into the Faith, on the other this man had a bucket of river water. On the one hand so more or less did John. On the other-other, if word ever got to the Bishop.
‘I think I have holy water in the car.’
Whether my father was afraid that we would not survive until the priest returned from his holidays, whether he was saving us from an afterlife of wandering among the unblessed, had over-Dante-ed on the short fat green-backed edition of The Divine Comedy (Book 999, Modern Library, New York) that has M.P. Gallagher, Rome written on an unposted envelope inside, whether it was in compliance with Abraham’s thinking or in defiance of the Reverend’s, whether it came abruptly out of the fracture and loss of the poem, whether the poem itself was to be about river-birth and renewal and the priest’s question had been trigger for the outlandish fact of it, I can never decide.
When Father Tipp went to his car the plastic bottle of Holy Water was empty. He’d been over-liberal at Prendergast’s the day before. When he came in the front door to tell them he’d send to the Parochial House for more he came face to face with the chastening truth that there is a tide in things, for Ryan’s bucket was in the centre of the flagstone floor, my father was kneeling, cradling Aeney in his arms, and the waves of praying were just waiting for his blessing to dip us into the brimming water.
Nearly twenty years later, still in exile and sitting up here in the attic room beside the bed, that’s how Father Tipp told it. Lest I fear our baptism sub-standard in religious terms, he added that no sooner had he started proceedings than there was a general shuffling among the gathered witnesses pressed tight and pretty much steaming inside our kitchen. Everyone closed in around us, everyone wanted to see. It was as if our story was already being told and was moving the hearts of Faha, making people think These two will need help, for right then there was an opening of shirt buttons, a rummaging in handbags, in wallets and coat pockets, a general flurry of rooting about, and then, as the river water was being scooped from the bucket, into our swaddling on the kitchen floor came assorted Miraculous Medals, rosary beads, Memorial cards, brown and blue and green scapulars of various antiquity (and body odour), two Padre Pios, two Pope John Pauls, one Little Flower, Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, Patron-of-the-Missions card, several (because we had been Lost & Found) Saint Anthonys, one Saint Teresa of Ávila, Patron of Headache Sufferers, and from the handbag of Margaret Crowe a sort of crouched-down Lionel Messi-looking Saint Francis of Assisi, all of them well-worn and used and in our first moments in this world falling around Aeney and I now like holy human rain.
Chapter 13
My father used Aisling copybooks. He wrote in pencil. Like Robert Lowell (and Margaret Hennessy, who looked like she had been returned to Faha after abduction by aliens), he often put his head to one side, as if one ear was leaning towards a sound that was not yet in this world. He hummed. He also tapped. I was afraid of sleep. I lay in his lap, small as a sonnet, and just as difficult.
He sat and hummed. Then suddenly he leaned across and I was lost in the deep coarse smell of the river-fields in his jumper and heard, somewhere invisibly above, the soft rubbing sound of pencil on paper.
He leaned back, hummed what he had written. We rocked on.
Aeney had no jealousy in him. I think at first he didn’t know he was a twin. It is different for boys. Boys are born as masters of the universe, until a bigger master knocks them down. I cried; Aeney slept. I was picked up and carried out from where our cots were in Mam and Dad’s, taken up the steep stair that RLS would be delighted to know was called a Captain’s Ladder, on to the little landing and into the chill space that Before Conversion was then the attic and later Aeney’s and mine. Up here, spilled pool of light and stack of books, was my father’s pine table and chair. Up here by the bar-heater he wrote the first poems with me on his lap. When I woke in the mornings I was back in my cot, and felt, well, composed. My brother did not care. Even when later he discovered I could not sleep unless held, when he sometimes woke and looked across and his sister was vanished, he appeared unperturbed. Maybe he wasn’t that attached to me. Maybe he had a finely developed and fearless sense of the world to come, or had the unshakeable confidence of the first-born, that first landing in the plump arms of Nurse Dowling, which had informed him that things would be all right. The only fracture in this, the only inkling of otherwise was what only I knew, the way Aeney’s hand in sleep went to his sleeve or the label of his pillow so that he was always holding on to something and never adrift.
Each family functions in their own way, by rules reinvented daily. The strangeness of each of us is somehow accommodated so that there can be such a thing as family and we can all live for some time at least in the same house. Normal is what you know. In our family it was unremarkable that my father had no income, that he hummed above the ceiling, only went into a church when there was no Mass on, fished religiously, had a book permanently sticking out of his pocket so his pockets were always torn at the edges, or to himself sang undervoice and off-key what I didn’t know then was the Psalms. It was not curious that he liked jam with sausages, was no more odd than Nan sitting on Clare Champions and smoking up the chimney or Aeney’s craving for salt on everything, cornflakes, hot chocolate and cake. Nothing in your own family is unusual.
I think nothing of it on the morning the Tooth Fairy has come to be brought by my mother out in the not-quite-rain to find my father, and to find him waiting for a cow to calve while reading aloud. It’s the dirty white paperback of William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience (Book 1,112, Avon Books, New York) but back then I think it’s a story for the cows.
‘There she is!’ The book goes into his pocket. He kneels down to me. Always in happiness my father seemed on the point of tears. I thought it normal. I thought every adult must have these huge tides of emotion rising. Every adult must feel this wave of undeserving when they kneel down and see the marvel of their children.
‘Did she come?’
I smile my crooked smile, hold out the shining coin.
‘Let me see. Well well well. Isn’t that something? Will you give me a loan?’
I will. I offer it, but he presses my hand closed inside his.
‘You hold on to it for now, Ruthie,’ he says. ‘But I’ll know where to come if I need it.’
The colour of his eyes deepens with feeling and he has these twin clefts either side of his lips where feeling is checked. ‘You must have been very very good to get that much. Did you see her?’
I didn’t.
‘Do you know I think I did hear something,’ my father says. ‘It was very late. I was awake and working and I heard this gentle whh whh whh.’ He blows three times to make the wings of the Tooth Fairy as she circles and then descends upon our house. Whh whh whh. ‘She must have folded her wings then because I didn’t hear her inside the kitchen, and the wings would have knocked against things, wouldn’t they?’
They would.
‘But the latch. That’s why I heard the latch. I was wondering about that. It made just the softest clack, must have been when she was going down to your room. You didn’t see her at all? But you felt her maybe?’
I did. I do now.
I nod my solemn five-year-old nod and fly up into the air in my father’s arms. He turns me around in the sky above him, which is where I want to be always, but cannot, and must take succour in the knowledge that though human beings can’t fly soon I will lose more teeth.
When Mam takes me back across the meadow, rain-starred, gummy, dizzy, my father is back reading Blake to the cows.
One day we get a dog, a golden retriever my father christens Huckleberry. He’s not golden but white, which is the best kind I tell God-forgive-me the Bitch of the Brouders when she says your dog is a fake. Aeney and I take Huckleberry down to show him the river and to tell him not to drown. He’s puppy-manic and piddle-happy, scampering on the end of our blue baler-twine leash like h
is dream-legs are longer than his real ones. Aeney runs with him, and I run after, realising instantly that Huck is to be Aeney’s dog, that in a way inexplicable unless you’ve known it, they recognise each other.
Huck will not swim. He may be able to, we don’t know. We throw sticks into the water thinking to fool him into having his retrieving instinct override his desire not to get wet, but he just sits and in the deeps of his brown eyes the sticks float away down the river.
My father says we should skip our homework, we should take him to the beach, and we all load into the Cortina and drive to Kilkee. Huck loves the car. He loves to be moving. He sits up and looks out and Aeney winds down the window that later won’t wind up but has to be fingertip-pulled and then pressed the last inch. I think Huckleberry knows we’re going to the sea. I’m thinking he smells it and is already working out his strategy, How To Avoid The Sea.
That’s the kind of mind I have.
It’s still the time when dogs are allowed to run free on beaches. The Minister for Poo hasn’t been elected yet. So when we come down on to the big horseshoe beach Aeney lets Huck go and Huck goes running like he’s never run before, like sand and shore and sea-wind are marvels particular for dogs. He runs and you feel joy. You can’t explain that. He runs head out and ears back, like he can’t get to where he is going fast enough, like his blood remembers beaches from a world before and what beaches mean is freedom. Aeney tears after him. He yells Huck! Huck! and is not dismayed when Huck doesn’t slow, but runs on regardless, arms flying, carefree in the way we all want to be but suppose only exists in fairy tales, the pair of their prints briefly present in the sea-washed glare of the gone-out tide.
‘Swim, Ruthie?’ Dad asks, though he knows I won’t. Then he is in his brown trunks walking towards the ocean and Mam and I are standing, the way girls always are, watching, holding the clothes, peering into the distance, first for Aeney, and then into the far-out sea for Dad.
History of the Rain Page 24