Come on Everybody

Home > Fantasy > Come on Everybody > Page 9
Come on Everybody Page 9

by Adrian Mitchell


  Strange that Tennyson should be

  Remembered for his poems really,

  We always thought of him

  As a golfer.

  There hasn’t been much time

  For poetry since the Twenties

  What with leaving the Communist Church

  To join the Catholic Party

  And explaining why in the CIA Monthly.

  In 1963, for one night only,

  I became the fourth Liverpool Marx Brother.

  There was Groucho McGough,

  Chico Henri, Harpo Patten

  And me, I was Zeppo,

  Yer, I was Pete Best.

  Finally I was given the Chair of Comparative Ambiguity

  At Armpit University, Java.

  It didn’t keep me busy,

  But it kept me quiet.

  It seemed like poetry had been safely tucked up for the night.

  What Is Poetry?

  (for Sasho, Daniella, Vladko and Martin Shurbanov)

  Look at those naked words dancing together!

  Everyone’s very embarrassed.

  Only one thing to do about it –

  Off with your clothes

  And join in the dance.

  Naked words and people dancing together.

  There’s going to be trouble.

  Here come the Poetry Police!

  Keep dancing.

  Autumnobile

  The forest’s throat is sore.

  Frost-work. Echoing shouts of friends.

  October, in her gold-embroidered nightie,

  Floating downstream, little mad flowers shimmering.

  The silky fur of her

  And her hot fingers curling,

  Uncurling round and a sudden shove –

  There goes my heart tobogganing,

  Down snow, slush, ending stuck in the mud,

  That’s love! O dig me out of here

  And glide me off down Pleasure Street

  To the sparkle rink where bears go skating.

  I ate pancakes at the funeral.

  I ate pancakes and ice-cream too.

  The mourners drank like musty flies,

  All round Summer’s coffin, sucking and buzzing.

  The days of dust and nights of gnats

  Are over and, covered with raindrop warts,

  My friend, the most unpopular Season in school,

  Smoking and spitting – Autumn’s coming.

  How do I love that fool, the Fall?

  Like Paraquatted nettles. Like

  A two-headed 50p. Like a sick shark.

  Like a punchy boxer who can’t stop grinning.

  Sunshine’s rationed. Get in the queue

  For a yard of colour, a pound of warm.

  Deathbed scenes on the video-sky,

  Sunsets like Olivier acting dying.

  I feel weightless as a child who’s built

  Out of nursery bricks with ducks and clocks on.

  I eat more sleep. I slap more feet.

  Autumn – my marzipan flesh is seething.

  I open a book and splash straight into it.

  The fire reads all my old newspapers.

  I freak across the galaxy on Pegasus

  And see the cracked old world, rocking and bleeding.

  The saloon doors in my skull swing open,

  Out stride a posse of cowboy children

  Bearing a cauldron of the magic beans

  Which always set my poems quivering.

  Now my electric typer purrs,

  And now it clackers under my fingers’

  Flickering. And now the oily engine

  Throbs into hubbub. The Autumnobile is leaving.

  Nobody on earth knows where on earth they’re going

  ……

  (a hell of a long way after Pushkin and Derzhavin)

  Land of Dopes and Loonies

  William Shakespeare was loony

  Burns was a maniac too

  Milton was thoroughly crackers

  Yeats was a loony all through

  Edward Lear, Shelley and Coleridge,

  Whitman and Lawrence and Blake

  What a procession of nutters

  Looning for poetry’s sake

  All of the poets were dafties

  Dafter when the going got rough

  All except William Wordsworth

  Who wasn’t nearly crazy enough

  Leonardo was loopy

  So was Toulouse Lautrec

  Bosch had all of his screws loose

  Van Gogh’s head was a wreck

  Pablo Picasso was batty

  Just take a look at his work

  Rembrandt was out of his windmill

  Brueghel was bloody berserk

  All of the painters were bonkers

  In the barmy army of art

  All except Sir Joshua Reynolds

  And he was a wealthy old Humpty Dumpty…

  To a Critic

  You don’t go to Shakespeare for statistics

  You don’t go to bed for a religious service

  But you want poems like metal mental mazes –

  Excuse me while I nervous.

  A song can carry so many facts

  A song can lift plenty of story

  A song can score jokes and curses too

  And any amount of glory

  But if you overload your dingadong song

  With theoretical baggage

  Its wings tear along the dotted line

  And it droppeth to earth like a cabbage

  Yes it droppeth to earth like a bloody great cabbage

  And the cabbage begins to rot.

  My songs may be childish as paper planes

  But they glide – so thanks a lot.

  A Sunset Cloud Procession Passing Ralph Steadman’s House

  1. A cigar-smoking porker drags a small hay-cart from which a jewelled crocodile smiles and waves.

  2. A black fried egg struts by, one woolly eyebrow raised like Noel Coward.

  3. An emaciated caribou clanks along.

  4. An ant-eater inflates a smoker’s-lung balloon.

  5. Eskimo Jim pulls Auntie Hippo tail-first, but she hangs on to her perambulator full of hippolets.

  6. They are pursued by a neolithic Hoover.

  7. And followed by Leonardo’s Tin Lizzie and Michelangelo as a tumescent frogman, pride of the Sexual Boat Service.

  8. A simple mushroom shape, rising one inch every four seconds.

  9. Father Time with a crumpled scythe.

  10. A whale spouting black shampoo all over its own humpy head.

  11. A cocker spaniel taking a free ride on the backbone of a boa-constrictor.

  12. And up from out of the dark hill’s shoulders rise the shoulders of another, larger, darker hill.

  Ode to George Melly

  If Bonzo the Dog got resurrected he could leap like you

  If Satan the Snake ate Adam’s birthday cake he would creep like you

  If Liz Bat Queen wasn’t pound-note green she’d hand the Crown to you –

  For nothing on earth falls down like George Melly do.

  For the Eightieth Birthday of Hoagy Carmichael

  (22 November 1979)

  Hoagland – white waterfall piano keys!

  Old rockin’ chairs to help us all think mellow!

  Always-Fall forests of star-tall trees

  Growing chords of gold, brown, red and yellow!

  Yes, Hoagland, friendliest of all countries.

  Casual is, I guess, as casual does,

  And you casually sing and casually knock us sideways.

  Rolling songs riding the river’s tideways,

  Mist-songs gliding, city-songs that buzz.

  I wander Hoagland pathways when dusk falls.

  Celia strolls with me as wild and tame

  Hoagland bird-folk enchant us with their calls.

  Anyone who has ears grins at your name.

  Eighty years of great songs! I wish you would
/>   Live on as long as your good Hoagland life feels good.

  NOTES: a. Hoagland is Mr Carmichael’s official Christian name.

  b. Celia is my wife’s name.

  Happy Fiftieth Deathbed

  D.H. Lawrence on the dodgem cars

  Sniffing the smell of the electric stars

  Cool black angel jumps up beside

  Sorry David Herbert it’s the end of your ride

  Thank you very much Mr D.H. Lawrence

  Thank you very much

  Thank you very much Mr D.H. Lawrence

  For The Rainbow and such

  D.H. Lawrence with naughty Mrs Brown

  Trying to play her hurdy-gurdy upside-down

  In comes Mr Brown and he says Veronica

  May I accompany on my harmonica

  Thank you very much Mr D.H. Lawrence

  Thank you very much

  Thank you very much Mr D.H. Lawrence

  Back to your hutch

  D.H. Lawrence met Freud in a dream

  Selling stop me and buy one Eldorado ice cream

  Siggie says you ought to call your stories

  Knickerbocker Splits and Banana Glories

  Thank you very much Mr D.H. Lawrence

  Thank you very much

  Thank you very much Mr D.H. Lawrence

  Keep in touch

  The Call

  (or Does The Apple Tree Hate Plums?)

  i was standing in my room

  the whirling tape was singing:

  i’m never going back

  i’m never going back.

  i read four lines by Elaine Feinstein

  the tears jumped in my eyes.

  i read eight lines by Allen Ginsberg

  and electricity sprang

  from the soles of my feet

  and the electric flames

  danced on the roof of my skull.

  someone calling

  my self calling to myself

  the call i’d been hoping for

  let yourself sing it said

  let yourself dance

  let yourself be

  an apple tree

  i wrote this daftness down

  then smiled and smiled

  and said aloud

  thank you thank you

  you may want money

  you may want pears

  you may want bayonets

  or tears

  shake me as hard as you like

  only apples will fall

  apples apples and apples

  Lament for the Welsh Makers

  WILLIAM DUNBAR sang piteously

  When he mourned for the Makers of poetry.

  He engraved their names with this commentary –

  Timor mortis conturbat me.

  DUNBAR, I’m Scot-begotten too,

  But I would celebrate a few

  Welsh masters of the wizardry –

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  ‘After the feasting, silence fell.’

  ANEIRIN knew how the dead smell.

  Now he has joined their company.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  TALIESIN, born of earth and clay,

  Primroses, the ninth wave’s spray

  And nettle flowers, where is he?

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  LLYWARCH’s sons numbered twenty-four.

  Each one was eaten by the war.

  He lived to curse senility.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  TALHAEARN and AROFAN,

  AFAN FERDDIG and MORFRAN

  Are lost, with all their poetry.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  MYRDDIN sang, a silver bell,

  But from the battlefield he fell

  Into a deep insanity.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  GWALCHMAI, who sang of Anglesey

  And a girl like snowfall on a tree

  And lions too, lies silently –

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  CYNDDELW’s balladry was sold

  For women’s kisses and men’s gold.

  His shop is shut permanently.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  HYWEL chanted Meirionnydd’s charm.

  His pillow was a girl’s white arm.

  Now he is whiter far than she.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  PRYDYDD Y MOCH would smile to see

  An Englishman – if he was maggoty.

  Now he is grinning bonily.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  DAFYDD AP GWILYM did women much good

  At the cuckoo’s church in the green wood.

  Death ended his sweet ministry.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  GWERFYL MECHAIN wrote in cheerful tones

  Of the human body’s tropical zones.

  She shared DAFYDD’s hot philosophy.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  IOLO GOCH wrote of any old thing –

  Girls, feasts and even an English King.

  They say he died most professionally.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  GRUFFUDD GRYG wept desperately

  For the North of Wales in her poverty.

  He was a bird from heaven’s country.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  LLYWELYN GOGH’s fist dared to knock

  On the heavy door with the black steel lock.

  A skull told him its history.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  SION CENT, who sang thank you to his purse,

  RHYS GOGH, who killed a fox with verse,

  Sleep in the gravel dormitory.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  IEUAN AP RHYDDERCH so scholarly,

  GWERFUL MADOG of famed hospitality,

  LEWYS GLYN COTHI who loved luxury –

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  DAFYDD AP EDMWND’s singing skill

  Thrilled through all Wales. Then it fell still.

  LEWYS MON wrote his elegy.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  BEDO BRWNLLYS, IEUAN DEULWYN,

  GUTYN OWAIN, TUDUR PENLLYN,

  All exiles in Death’s monarchy.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  Life was dark-coloured to TUDUR ALED.

  WILLIAM LLYN brooded on the dead.

  SION TUDUR mocked all vanity.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  DIC HUWS dedicated a roundelay

  To a girl by the name of Break of Day.

  Night broke on both of them, remorselessly –

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  And hundreds have since joined the towering choir –

  Poets of Wales, like trees on fire,

  Light the black twentieth century.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  Oh DYLAN THOMAS, as bright as nails,

  Could make no kind of a living in Wales

  So he died of American charity.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  Terror of death, terror of death,

  Terror of death, terror of death,

  That drumbeat sounds relentlessly.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  Since we must all of us ride down

  The black hill into the black town,

  Let us sing out courageously.

  The fear of death moves inside me.

  The black lungs swell, the black harp sighs,

  Whenever a Welsh maker dies.

  Forgive my nervous balladry.

  Timor mortis conturbat me.

  LOVE, THE APEMAN, CURSES,

  BLESSINGS AND FRIENDS

  Good Day

  the day was like molten glass

  i sauntered around with a carnival heart

  picking up the puppies other people threw away
/>   and arranging them in my pouch

  yes the day was like molten glass

  so i took my spade down the old peninsula

  dug a channel across its neck and watched the sea jump through

  then drank to the health of a new island

  well the day was like molten glass

  sunshine greeting me like a big irish doctor

  blackberries tapping out a rhythm on their leaves

  tight enough and bright enough to set a donkey dancing

  i said the day was like molten glass

  the fingers of the cruising breezes

  massaged the tensions out of my head

  and i loved my love with an a and an ab and everything down to zed

  Celia Celia

  When I am sad and weary

  When I think all hope has gone

  When I walk along High Holborn

  I think of you with nothing on

  Footnotes on Celia Celia

  Used to slouch along High Holborn

  in my gruesome solo lunch-hours.

  It was entirely lined

  with Gothick insurance offices

  except for one oblong block of a shop

  called Gamages,

  where, once,

  drunk, on Christmas Eve,

  I bought myself a battery-operated Japanese pig

  with a chef’s hat on top of his head

  and a metal stove which lit up red

  and the pig moved a frying pan up and down with his hand

 

‹ Prev