One Thousand Nights and Counting

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One Thousand Nights and Counting Page 6

by Glyn Maxwell


  Was a woman’s face in a glass. She ordered it like weather.

  Here’s where the stepping leg of a pale princess

  Would never gleam in the flank of a silver Merc,

  No carpet lap at the tips of an angel’s dress

  As that began its catwalk,

  No head be turned or heart won, none have all the luck.

  It had to open faster than today.

  She scratched a deadline on the skin of earth.

  They couldn’t meet it but they couldn’t say.

  They swallowed back their breath.

  The sun abruptly set in each unchewing mouth.

  Here’s where the plans were laid, and here ignored,

  Here they were changed, here lied about, here lost,

  Here’s where they pulled the trick they could afford,

  Here’s where they paid the cost,

  Where a workman sang all day, baked in a wall to the waist,

  When every shortcut snapped on the one night,

  Caving and bulging floors like a bigger child

  Had waded from the future for a fight,

  And each thing was spilled,

  Each dimly praying gap of air was found and filled.

  The light went out on no one knows how few:

  Interred, incinerated, a foot stuck out

  Live from a ceiling waving in a shoe

  As the auditorium set,

  And the sun was down, the building up, the deadline met,

  And no one goes there now except to nod.

  At what you get when men take on the sun.

  At what men do when told to by a god

  Who’s gone, and wasn’t one.

  How riches look in daylight when there are none.

  The Sightseers

  We sing, we lucky pirates, as we sail,

  Overladen with our creaking cargo

  Of eights and nines, and imagine chains of island

  Zeroes up ahead. Some of us are ill, though,

  And yelp and gibber of a rushing edge,

  A foam of stars, the boatswain upside down

  Who grins You told me so.

  We draw to the rail,

  Sleepless, and we wait and, sure enough,

  Behind us like our chat against the breezes,

  They stir and mutter, whom we call the Sightseers,

  Who stay the length of a hundred of my heartbeats.

  It passes quickly with them right behind us.

  I count the beats, it’s how I’m brave enough

  Not to cry out or vault the rail for terror –

  I number them as years of my dim hundred

  Soon to be gone: so I have them born to sunlight,

  Burgeoning in that apple England, picked

  Or fallen, then I think of them as upright,

  Ideas and expectations trailing off

  Across the years, and then I see them cold,

  Unshockable and tired. And by the time I

  Stumble in on the sixty-second heartbeat

  Their eyes are red with secrets, and their heads

  Are white with what has gone through an honest mind.

  And then they don’t believe what they are seeing.

  And then they are seeing nothing, and I believe

  They walk on deck because they wake and sniff

  Some empty space at every century’s end,

  Like breath gone out, or the air of the first flowers

  That ever filled their eyes, as if it’s starting –

  They jolt from bed and hurry from their cabins

  To see strange figures clutching at a rail.

  We sing, we lucky pirates, as we sail.

  From Phaeton and the Chariot of the Sun

  Fragments of an Investigative Documentary

  I: Cine

  Cine, sliver of history. A few minutes

  finish you off in a blare of white, and the scutter

  and scutter and sigh, then the lamp on and the smiling

  that something, at least, is over.

  Cine, chopper of Time, mercurial

  slitter, century shadowing through our light:

  London’s sepia scuttle, a toadstool whitens

  Nevada. Colour – Zapruder.

  Cine. A reel was found in a vault in a place

  I happened on in the course of a search. This reel

  was not – but is now – the object of that search

  so it’s over. Which is how

  poetry works, by the way. Like cine film

  it yields to the bright. Like cine film it is either

  print or nothing, like cine film that nothing

  is sky. Like cine film

  it’s made of people who run towards you and cry.

  III: The Horses’ Mouths: Pyrois

  Film me in silhouette. I insist. I’m not

  Them prancing nags. Is that thing rolling? No?

  Good. It better not be. What you got,

  Rothmans? Gimme. What do you want to know?

  The boy. The boy in the chariot? Oh no.

  Some things I crack about, some things I don’t.

  You learn the worst is never long ago.

  We horses live our lives in the word won’t

  But you won’t understand, you undergods.

  Gimme the Bushmills. Woh that hit the spot.

  The boy in the chariot. Hell. It makes no odds.

  It happened. Why? This isn’t lit. Why not?

  What was the story . . . somebody made him think

  His father wasn’t his father? Right, so he snaps

  And goes and gets his way. Dies in the drink.

  Talking of which . . . No, you pedalling chaps

  Think you’re as free as air though you’re made of earth.

  You got to obey your whims like a whipped horse

  Flies. That boy. He thought about his birth.

  He wanted it again. He ran his course.

  V: The Horses’ Mouths: Eous

  How did you find me here?

  This is my refuge from all human voices,

  Their differences that shrivel into hisses

  All indistinct, their faces

  Merged to the infinite grains of a far shore

  Licked by the dog sea.

  Here on my noiseless meadow I ride alone,

  Ride, ride myself with the wind on my spine

  While the fuelled and roaring Sun

  Mislays my name in the mess of his tyranny.

  Talk to the others, friend.

  Find the unkempt Pyrois; Aethon, vain

  And cosseted by Man; then look for Phlegon

  Anywhere the thin

  Are all there is, and the wind is a hurled sand.

  That’s his gesture. Mine?

  Mine’s this solitude. I’ve a world to tell

  But not this world. We switched your sky into Hell

  And all for a human will,

  Its pride, its point, its prick. It will come again.

  How did I know it was him?

  When we were torn through clouds and the East wind

  I felt no weight on my back, heard no command,

  And felt no pull, no hand,

  No pilot. No escape now. Kingdom come.

  Three images, that’s all.

  One was his face, the boy, his face when he lost

  The reins and then his footing – that was the last

  We saw of him – he must

  Presumably have gone in a fireball –

  Another was how the Moon,

  Seeing us hurtle by, reminded us all

  Of the face of a mother beside a carousel,

  Worrying herself ill

  As her children wave, are gone, are back too soon

  And another was afterwards.

  I lay for a good forever somewhere in the woods.

  The petrified seconds prayed, the hours wore hoods.

  ‘You gods,’ I said, ‘You gods.’

  And those, I trusted,
those were my final words

  To men. Instead, these are . . .

  Forget Eous, leave me alone in my meadow,

  Riding myself, racing my sisterly shadow

  Into the shade, where sorrow

  Wraps her and deserts me, drenched, here.

  VI: The Horses’ Mouths: Aethon

  One minute, love.

  You’re looking at

  The winner of

  The 2:15,

  3.38,

  And 5 o’clock.

  I haven’t time.

  I race, I work.

  Ask what you want

  But ask it fast.

  The time you spend

  Is time I lose,

  Is time we’ve lost.

  Aethon never

  Loses, friend,

  You got that? Ever.

  The chariot?

  The idiot boy?

  I don’t admit

  And never shall

  I lost that day.

  He may have done.

  He burned. So what?

  His father’s son.

  The countries burned,

  The oceans steamed,

  The stinking wind

  It filled my eyes.

  I never dreamed

  Years afterwards

  I’d humble all

  These thoroughbreds

  Day in day out,

  Year after year,

  Beyond all doubt

  Beyond compare,

  The sight they fear,

  Aethon, pride

  Of any course

  You humans ride.

  If all the gold

  That lights this room

  Was melted, rolled

  And stretched for me,

  I should in time

  Reach Heaven’s gate

  And there I’d not

  Be made to wait

  But rode by servants

  Back to where

  I rode the Heavens

  Once, the Sun

  Would part the air

  For Aethon,

  Fanfared, forgiven,

  Aethon.

  VIII: A Scientist Explains

  Would he have suffered? That depends what you mean.

  Would he have suffered? Lady, let me explain.

  The fire went north.

  The northern Plough,

  Too hot to bear it,

  Plunged below

  The sea; the Snake,

  Sluggish and cold,

  Was scorched to fury;

  Boötes, old

  And slow, he too

  Was stricken down,

  He too was dragged or stricken down

  When Phaeton flew.

  Would he have suffered? Suffering’s hard to define.

  Would he have suffered? Lady, let me explain.

  He was afraid

  Of heights and now

  The world he knew

  Was spread below

  And churning. West

  He’d never make,

  The wounded East

  Bled in his wake.

  He didn’t know

  The horses’ names,

  He’d never thought to ask their names

  And didn’t now.

  Would he have suffered? Would he have suffered pain?

  Would he have suffered? Lady, let me explain.

  He bore the worst

  Of Heaven, curved

  With poison, Scorpio!

  Wild, he swerved

  And lost the reins

  And lost the flight.

  The chariot set

  This world alight:

  The woods and streams,

  The crops and towns,

  The nations perished in their towns

  As in their dreams.

  Would he have suffered? That depends what you mean.

  Would he have suffered? Lady, let me explain.

  Athos, Taurus,

  Helicon,

  Parnassus, Cynthus,

  Babylon,

  Ossa, Pindus,

  Caucasus,

  Olympus, Libya,

  Ismarus,

  Rhine and Rhone

  And Nile and Tiber,

  Nile and even promised Tiber?

  Steam on stone.

  Would he have suffered? Suffering’s hard to define.

  Would he have suffered? Lady, let me explain.

  The seas had shrunk

  And all was sand,

  They felt the scorch

  In Netherland:

  Nereus sweltered,

  Neptune swore,

  The Earth appealed

  High Jupiter:

  ‘I may deserve

  This doom, but spare

  Your Heaven itself from fire, spare

  What’s left to save!’

  Would he have suffered? Would he have suffered pain?

  Would he have suffered? Lady, let me explain.

  Obviously

  One shot alone,

  One thunderball

  From Heaven’s throne,

  Divided boy

  From flaming car,

  Made fire of him

  And falling star,

  A star of him

  That plunged and died

  In the River Eridanus, died

  Far far from home.

  Would he have suffered? That depends what you mean.

  Would he have suffered? Lady, let me explain.

  Lady?

  IX: Clymene’s Coda

  Death was instantaneous.

  Death is always instantaneous.

  Loss was instantaneous.

  Loss is always.

  X: The Horses’ Mouths: Phlegon

  Get on my back. You all do in the end.

  You’ve come some way to go the way you came,

  But shall do, all the same,

  My doubly hopping friend,

  At least you ride in peace, at least you ask my name.

  Where are the other three? There’s no surprise.

  Eous rippling aimlessly alone,

  Pyrois wrecked, Aethon?

  Neighing at blue skies,

  As if his loss, our loss, was some grand race he’d won.

  I work this zone. Don’t have to, but I do.

  I do have to, and so would you. Look now,

  The planters on the brow,

  They falter, wondering who

  Wants what of them and why. They’ll try to question you.

  Be plain with them. It waters you with hope

  That in this desert where the fire can’t die

  Nor air reach to the sky,

  Somehow they grow a crop

  That doesn’t care it’s dead, that doesn’t know. Now stop,

  Get off my back. Feel hotness on each sole

  And howl. For this is not the word made flesh,

  This is the word made ash,

  This is the mouth made hole,

  Here where the star fell, here where he got his wish.

  The Wish

  Alone in spoiling it, I said I wish

  That I can wish for everything. They said

  That’s cheating. You’ve one wish. I said that is

  One wish. We sat against the paper shed.

  Now, they had wished for peace on earth, for painted

  Chocolate cities, flights to anywhere,

  And one strange one to go with her – he pointed

  To where she did her handstands on her hair,

  Her pout flipped to a smile, as if the sky

  Would grant what it amused itself to grant.

  They pondered, troubled, hot with how and why,

  Considering my case. When the bell went

  Against my wish and that most amazing field

  Began to be abandoned, as that girl

  Was falling to her feet, and chocolate filled

  The hands and crumbled happily, I was still

  Wondering, as I was all afternoon,

  If they would gr
ant my wish. When at last they would,

  I found myself at my own gate, alone,

  Unwishing, backwards, everything I could.

  Someone at the Door

  Men call it a war.

  But all it ever is for us is

  Someone at the door.

  What men call this affair

  Across the land alights on us as

  Howling on a stair.

  What men call duty-bound

  Is teenage girls and tiny children

  Blinking by a mound.

  What men call civil strife

  Is strangers in the weeds and a wan

  Bride with a fruit-knife.

  For men call it a war

  But all it ever is for us is

  Someone at the door.

  The cry a man can hear

  Is cut with skill upon a stone

  Some forty yards from here.

  The flag a man can wave

  Will go nine times around whatever’s

  Spooned into a grave.

  And when a cannon booms

  It starts the clocks that tick forever

  In our living rooms.

  For men call it a war.

  But all it ever is for us is

 

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