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Selected Poems

Page 18

by Harrison, Tony


  her pinafore full of ripe plums,

  Victorias, with amber ooze

  round their stalks, and says: Choose! Choose!

  Now so much older, I,

  more aware I’ve got to die,

  use such ruses, I derive

  from my mother, to survive.

  Last week I saw here at the Met

  a ‘Wheel of Life’ made in Tibet

  where ‘Man Picking Fruit’ ’s used to depict,

  in both the picker and the picked,

  ultimate futility. Such dismal crap’ll

  never spoil my mother’s apple.

  Fuck philosophy that sees

  life itself as some disease

  we sicken with until released,

  supervised by Pope or priest,

  into a dry defruited zone

  where no James Grieves were ever grown.

  I’d barter nebulous Nirvanas

  for carambolas or bananas.

  I need to neologize to find

  the fruit in futile humankind,

  and fruitility is what I call

  the fate which falls upon us all.

  Meaningless our lives may be

  but blessed with deep fruitility.

  It could take pages if I list

  all the joys of the fruitilitist:

  retsina and grilled squid in Greece,

  that death-bed cut-out of Matisse

  I chanced on on a trip to Dallas,

  Sempre libera sung by Callas,

  love-making in the afternoon,

  the ripe papaya on this spoon

  lingered over as my way

  of starting on a fruitile day,

  where 73rd and Broadway meet.

  Even now the morning heat

  brings the piss smells off the street,

  Dobermann’s and man’s piss soars

  as far as us, and we’re eight floors.

  This breakfasting’s my Zensual ruse

  to counteract such Broadway views

  as those below, where homeless spread

  the books and mags to earn their bread

  and, after bread, if not before,

  the rocks of crack some value more.

  I read titles with my opera glasses:

  Opera News and Chunky Asses,

  Honcho, Ramrod, Newsweek, Time,

  stiff from showers 2 a dime,

  but, if like new, then 4 a dollar,

  Bush, the Pope, the Ayatollah,

  Noriega, Gorbachev,

  and other ones with covers off,

  a danse macabre, a Vanitas

  of big cheeses, and the chunky ass.

  Diva-adoring gays peruse

  the laid-out rows of Opera News.

  Spectacles of temporal flux,

  sidewalk piles of grubby books,

  30 copies of one play

  billed a great hit in its day,

  and some still supposed to be

  a dollar each, or 4 for 3.

  And there’s a neighbour off to buy

  the opera discs that help him die.

  He’s young but shuffles with a cane

  but will only use CDs for pain.

  His father, who won’t meet him, mails

  his sick son clothes from car-boot sales,

  but Pa and Ma don’t realize

  AIDS makes their son a smaller size.

  They’ve never talked of death or sex

  but occasionally Pa sends him cheques

  to buy AZT, as AZT’s

  one drug that slows down the disease.

  I saw him in the lobby:

  Hi,

  Pa sent me some more cash to buy

  AZT, but I bought these!

  and showed me scores of new CDs.

  My pa would think it such a waste

  me and my opera ain’t his taste.

  Got all of Callas’s CDs

  to comfort me through this disease.

  It’s Puccini next when Pa sends more,

  and he got off at the 7th floor …

  There’s someone wanting to be Mayor

  haranguing winos in the square,

  under Verdi’s statue who presides

  over crack-heads, crooks and suicides.

  Verdi with his vision blurred

  by birdshit stares from 73rd

  down at Dante at the Met

  where Verdi helps some to forget.

  But when they leave or enter there

  there’s no avoiding Dante’s stare,

  nor what’s beneath his constant gaze

  and stays there, while the opera plays,

  and pizza cartons three feet square

  leave mouth-watering hot blasts of air,

  a phantom mozzarella trail,

  for carton dwellers to inhale

  in lungfuls, hungry and alone

  beyond the pale of Pizzaphone.

  A claret goblet and with care

  that housed video or frigidaire

  now packages a shoeless man

  who rummages the garbage can

  already rummaged countless times

  for cans you can redeem for dimes.

  Shops redeem the empty can

  but not the can-redeeming man,

  nor that woman who’s got business sense

  so beds down where machines dispense

  24hr cash, and men, when pissed,

  might leave five dollars in her fist.

  One night I saw a famous diva

  stop her limo there and leave her

  scores of fresh fan-flung bouquets

  to wake to from her wino haze.

  And when she woke they say she cried

  with rage and terror, horrified

  the morning sun should wake her

  laid out for the undertaker.

  Death was all these blooms could mean,

  these tributes she was stretched between,

  beneath the bank’s cashpoint machine.

  Once aware she wasn’t dead

  she flogged the star’s bouquets for bread,

  well, pretzels; those posh bouquets

  kept her in booze for several days.

  I dread the moment, while I muse

  on all my fruitile 8th floor views,

  I hear the answerphone replay

  the dark side of the fruitile day:

  message one, a Scottish friend,

  sick, insomniac, half round the bend,

  drying out in St Luke’s, lying

  all tubed-up, detoxifying.

  His message goes as follows: Hi!

  just checking in before I die!

  The trolleyphone’s beside his bed.

  I call him back. He isn’t dead.

  Thought you were dying.

  I am! I am!

  Fucking dying for a dram!

  Another friend made mad by AIDS

  leaves night-time answerphone tirades.

  It wakes us when the tape records

  his rabid ravings from the wards.

  First his operatic repertoire

  that made him a TV bar star:

  Sempre libera, in falsetto,

  voice corseted as Violetta,

  Sempre libera, always free,

  he from AIDS and she TB.

  In sigmoidoscopy he’d brag:

  I am the world’s most buggered fag.

  Your rooter’s nothing, every dick

  I’ve ever had’s ten times as thick!

  After the aria and the pause

  while he curtsies to applause

  and clasps flung posies to his heart

  the mad Munchausen stories start

  and I hear a new bass voice begin:

  Those things like wine-stains on my skin

  those fucking things like spilled Merlot

  they ain’t what you guys think you know.

  They came, these scars like fucking Claret

  from the forest of the flame-flayed parrot.

  They’re bu
rns! They’re burns! I tried to seize

  the cure for AIDS from blazing trees.

  I was in Brazil, Manaus, where I gave

  my Violetta. And did Manaus rave!

  They adore me, darlings, in Brazil.

  They think I was just acting ill.

  Brava! brava! on and on

  beside the steaming Amazon.

  If I chose I could earn millions

  from brava-bravaing Brazilians!

  (Were you aware the rubber trade’s

  booming again because of AIDS?

  You see the stripe-gashed cauchos oozing

  condoms I never packed when cruising!)

  I went up-river in a cute caique

  from Manaus with the urge to seek

  the cure for what afflicts our kind

  and the sights up-river blew my mind –

  I saw pink dolphins, pink!

  and I hadn’t had a drop to drink!

  and no Colombia up my nose –

  dolphins pink as any fan-flung rose!

  I’d gone in costume. It was better

  trekking dressed as Violetta.

  Those creepers with sharp thorns don’t snag

  my depilated legs in drag.

  And where the forest was ablaze,

  brave Violetta, on behalf of gays,

  in corsets botanizing raced

  through dense forest now laid waste,

  charcoal gallows, charcoal glades

  of gutted antidotes for AIDS,

  the canopy deserted by

  the roasted birds that used to fly.

  And there were cures. They’ve gone. They’ve gone

  in the bonfires of the Amazon.

  Some creeper, bud, some bitter seed

  might be the breakthrough doctors need.

  All September it’s been blazing

  to give more future Big Macs grazing.

  Even now the forest flames

  are burning cures that have no names.

  In the ash of Amazonian oak

  the cure for AIDS went up in smoke …

  All this gabble seems quite graphic

  though culled from National Geographic

  bought at the sidewalk mag bazaar

  with covers of the passé star

  or politician laid between

  Butt Lust ‘Seat Meat’ magazine

  and iron-pumping Bulkritude

  both with pages wanker-glued.

  Then his falsetto ends the story:

  Cessarono gli spasimi del dolore …

  The sun sets here while it’s rising

  on countries just industrializing

  and day ends in a dying fire

  hued like my rasps piled on papaya,

  Broadway windows with glossed sheen

  of cranberry and carotene,

  sunset as the turning planet

  paints New York in pomegranate,

  with chemicals that now pollute

  the skies to look like too ripe fruit.

  The spoon-scraped limp papaya skin

  goes first into the garbage bin,

  then a big black trash bag, later

  down the chute to the incinerator,

  and the flotsam of time’s fleeting flux

  goes into dawn’s first garbage trucks.

  I’ll hear them grinding as it’s time

  again for papaya spritzed with lime.

  Tomorrow’s rasps piled on papaya

  chilled, ready for the life-denier,

  tomorrow when my heart says Yea

  to darkness ripening into day,

  remembering my mother whose

  gifts of fruit taught me this ruse,

  whose wartime wisdom would embrace

  both good and grotty with sweet grace,

  she who always used to say:

  Never wish your life away!

  Of all my muses it was she

  first taught me to love fruitility.

  Fig on the Tyne

  for Siani, on her birthday

  My life and garden, both transforming,

  thanks to you, and global warming,

  started today to intertwine

  tasting my first fig on the Tyne.

  When I heard scientists predict

  there’d be apricots and peaches picked

  in Britain’s South, and pinot noir

  where the rhubarb fields of Yorkshire are,

  the pithill pinot from lush vines

  ripening on demolished mines,

  a Rossington viognier,

  Sheffield shiraz, Grimethorpe gamay,

  fancy made a sun-kissed fiction:

  Dionysus redeeming dereliction.

  Dionysus! Wishful thinking,

  sitting in Doncaster drinking

  in Southern sun that lasts all day

  a local Donny vin du pays.

  No sommelier worth his salt ’ll spurn

  Gewürztraminer from Wath-on-Dearne!

  No longer would we need to traipse

  through airports to the lands of grapes.

  No more queuing at Heathrow

  when we grow all they used to grow.

  There’ll come a day no Loiner needs

  to go beyond the caves of Leeds

  to sup champagne that’s bottled where

  they throw their empties in the Aire.

  The South creeps Northwards, some say sweeps,

  swapping Beaujolais nouveau for neaps.

  This vision of Yorkshire by the Med

  no doubt won’t come till I’m long dead.

  Torridity in Tyne and Wear

  won’t come till I’m no longer here.

  Predictions for this land of plenty

  start, at the soonest, 2020,

  which is cutting it a wee bit fine

  if I’m to bask beside the Tyne.

  Sometimes I have to fantasize

  I’m living under bluer skies,

  but today I had a little sign

  here in Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

  Not just that this year’s birds are late

  leaving the North-East to migrate,

  they linger, O they’re welcome, they

  still sing for me at break of day.

  Some prophets that I’ve read believe

  there’ll come a day the birds don’t leave.

  The sign I mean was true but small

  and grown against my garden wall.

  If the scientists’ prediction

  isn’t all just wishful fiction,

  I thought once, why, if Leeds grows wine,

  can’t I grow a fig tree on the Tyne?

  Why not, if the River Aire’s

  going to wind through wine hectares,

  assume the scientists really know

  and plant something that needs sun to grow,

  more sun than usually comes its way

  in Newcastle or Whitley Bay,

  and here, on Tyneside, I’ll install

  a fig on my least sun-starved wall,

  and wait for global warming to produce

  figs oozing with full taste and juice.

  ‘Fig trees don’t grow in my native land’

  wrote Lawrence, when his work was banned.

  The climate ’s changing, figs do grow

  (and franker paintings go on show!)

  though not like San Gervasio,

  where the starved Midlander Brit

  found figs as ‘fissure’, ‘yoni’, ‘slit’.

  All those eyesores and black spots

  bulldozed flat in his native Notts,

  wait the creeping South’s advance

  to metamorphose into France.

  The climate he was restless for

  would come up to his own front door.

  I tell him now, the man who grew

  one Northern fig, that it’s not true:

  If you want figs, stay put in Notts,

  trust global warming, you’ll have lots.

  In parts
of Europe blessed with sun

  I’ve picked hundreds. Now, here, one.

  I’ve roamed about in similar fashion

  seeking Southern fruit and passion.

  His restlessness fed into mine

  though I’ve always come back to the Tyne.

  Though my life ’s been a different story.

  I’ve been ‘o ποιητης’ and ‘Il Signore’.

  Places where he used to go,

  Italy, New Mexico,

  I’ve also been to, half-inclined

  to leave everything at home behind,

  then on Guatavita’s shores I found

  gold everywhere just on the ground.

  I come to El Dorado and I find

  exactly what I’d left behind!

  Too busy being Pissarro

  ever to let my garden grow

  anything but those tough weeds

  I’ve known in Newcastle or Leeds,

  this gold I came to look upon

  with an ‘O my America’ of Donne,

  this El Dorado in my head,

  when I found it, only led,

  after all the searches I got high on

  to the El Dorado dandelion.

  That was my discovery,

  poet/Pissarro of the piss-en-lit!

  All that we search for when we roam

  is nowhere if not here at home.

  I picked one for you, and pressed the head

  of that Andean piss-a-bed,

  and now this one fig I discover

  I want to share with you, my lover.

  I never thought that it would grow

  when I planted it ten years ago.

  I decided this was what I’d do

  about the same time I’d met you.

  I watched it grow and much away

  feared it’d die, but now, today,

  September 20, ’99,

  your birthday, love, here on the Tyne,

  not flooded yet in Grecian sun,

  I picked one fig from it, just one!

  I picked the first fig that I’d grown

  but tasted its sweet flesh alone,

  when I’d wanted, O so much, to share

  the fig with one who wasn’t there,

  you with whom I hope to see

  years of figs from that same tree,

  I’d wanted here to cut in two

  one half for me, one half for you,

  to celebrate the first sweet sign

  of global ripening on the Tyne

  and with the first of my Tyne figs

  celebrate you’re 46!

  I never thought the tree would root

  let alone produce a fruit,

  I’ve seen it, like our love, survive

  from when you were only 35.

  That’s almost the length of time it took

  to pick this first ripe fig to suck.

  My heart too has felt the South,

  that puts this fig into my mouth,

  warm my heart’s North at a time

  life’s forecast as a colder clime,

  and, in the heart’s depths, it renewed

  love in life’s last latitude.

 

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