2/12/2016

stealing on the Saturday shift (Men's Casuals) at Bentall's
not realising my grandfather had worked the Furniture Department
to help my dad through Kingston Polytechnic,
/she lent me the pound for Hampton Ferry,
I pretended I'd had one but dropped it,
/Firenze was an angled word,
made of rosewood or exotic tree secretion
turkish-delight like
spicy carmine smelling, carved and fractal,
/October 3rd or something, it all started
looking at each other across the Sociology classroom,
Hannah offered to pay my fine
at Hampton Court station after college,
in the morning I had seen my father
in a suit there, I was smoking,
it was a laugh for us both, to see each other,
and me being snookered like that,

he was probably standing on the platform
where it crosses the river Mole
in the mist there
looking for kingfishers

there’s this motel by a snake-nest

there’s this motel by a snake-nest
in mounds of earth, where nothing grows,
and the snakes creep in, influencing your dreaming,
there was a suitcase under the window; it had murder in it;
I dreamt this in my deepest sleep for ages, in Sicily,
/he’s just this really
/and wheeled the carnival ships
along the main street of Megara
like the ancient Athenian flower festival,
the city Dionysia, opening bottles
of ancient memory of death/ and maiden sacrifice
(the mistaken murder of the peasant in Attika
who’d brought down Dionysos’ secret of viniculture;
the other peasants, they thought it was poison, & killed him,
& his daughter found him in a fountain, & hanged herself;)
the men of Megara in carnival drag, mock-shagging,
on tractors dragging ruins of trees/
opening up the seasons/
and praising what survived the winter,
including infants,
the girl who walked around Megara in a daze, smiling
with cigarettes/ and something cold someone’d bought her:
she got pregnant at this point, when she gave birth later
her head was shaved, smiling to herself, defiant,
/there’s this valley nestled in London’s thickness
of boaters sleeping, and onto the canal
where the wharfs of the city glistened
with seagull movement/ their voices
/going fishing early with my father
in the parks of Hampton Court Palace, the longwater
with its reedy banks, far-shore bushes, giant ancient
artwork/ I imagined connected to the Thames,
I held the back ropes, when we cruised up to Oxford
the great dusk-shadow
carving the Thames Valley at Runnymede
like a glacier/

peering out the car window/ to your face as you were walking,

peering out the car window
to your face as you were walking,
/the eastern seaboard of Sicily and
the cities of New England, my mother amongst
the railings of New York/ I fantasise
of Gotham City
/pulling into Syracuse,
rough walls and sunshine: so immersive, or
/your room in Catania, tangles by the ocean,
the latticed terraces of Syracusa’s rooftops
the island of Ortigia, in January
and the port is glistening
the chubby man and his son
bringing in their dhingy, ‘It feels like summer’ I thought
‘sunshine, mirror of memory,
in the soft new season, will they take me
to Salamina, Piraeus,
or through the mists, to Hackney,'
/Syracusa harbour was like Ramsgate when
we’d cruised down the Thames estuary, I often dream
of St Katherine’s dock, by Tower Bridge,
we moored there, I walked the docklands
I was ten and eleven
/she said in the tower block
on the Isle of Dogs, the girl had a thing
for the Marxist, Gramsci; went to Italy
visited his gravestone
/in the street market of Syracusa
tidbits chopped and lacerated
she looked up and was alike
a little
to the Korinthian princess in Pasolini’s *Medea*
/we sat at the harbour
on the steps, the lappings,
under the canopy of the banyan trees
or low arches of the harbour
/the Venetian-looking building, the poor,
we have no money, in the city we are left
with nothing, but outside of rent, in harbours,
we have time, to oil the keels, to imagine,

I dreamt your red hair/ falling into your handbag

I dreamt your red hair
falling into your handbag, searching for a key
to a bar, a shopfront,
no, the back door to your tenement; 
open collar, and coat,
a wide square, with all these little gardens;
*
radiance of/ warehouse music and/ happy crowds
behind the music, murmuring/
*
this is why I can't leave London. Zac Goldsmith
has this mansion in Petersham, round the corner
to my father's birthplace, on the estate, the Sandpits;
Goldsmith said he'd demolish
London's remaining social housing. I can't leave these memories
unkept in the winds, the meadows,
*
because of David Bowie, and my ancestors
with him in Stockwell.
My family came centuries ago, from Norwich,
Will made shoes and Margaret
made dresses, he came to work the railway
and his son did, and his son, but unemployment
was a plague, returning; a choice by government, cheap workers;
labouring, playing pub pianos,
married Liz at twenty; she swept the Oxo factory
and in the docks of London
he spoke many languages, with sailors.
He died in his forties, of poisoning.
*
My fatherless grandad/ they walked Stockwell shoeless/
he finally got a council house, married my grandma
who'd walked out of the mansion, disgusted at the idea
of spending her life in service;
*
bled out by the bankers
and overlords in Petershams, I will return by train
on iron horse through marshland; travel-flash in estuary,
night-trips up slim rivers, on speeding hallways railed
on Sussex breakwaters; I will return there wageless
passing down names,
*
I will bring back flame
to where my kind burn candles
in the attics of craftspeople's districts;
or ironworks, or music-halls, buildings of iron and glass
which our labour keeps transparent; by the flooding river
my grandad canvassing Battersea
you steal from us and impoverish,
we came here with John Ball, circa 1380
and are still here, camped, and waiting

/\ ><><>< /\

The valley’s wide and ragged blackness
felt huge and frightening
to fill with my voice; to touch the deeply textured
glades and hollows, animals, and the alleys of torrents
all at once; the abandoned cottages; in the lamplight
I remembered lovers, and friends,
and in the mountains … it is like an anteroom
to the cosmos of night, Greek temples
and Minoan harvest-palaces were aligned, after all
to the stars; forest paths, like winding tracks
leading above; but no, my death
won’t be such an upward ride. It will be like
at the London Nautical School
on the South Bank of the Thames, when I was asking a boy
about the stories he liked, and his answers
chimed, and rippled into me, before he spoke; time’s fabric,
in my mind, had ruptured,
and I regressed into the past
even as I saw ahead; a simultaneous cross-over:
I saw memories and their contents
as white, liquid, tadpole-like sacs
with an evocative membrane, fierce, and semi-permeable;
this left me stunned, and as I climbed back into the room,
as if through a window,
he looked concerned. Or perhaps I misread that;
perhaps, when I was in the slipstreams,
he hadn’t noticed, and my journey to the future
had happened in a trice, an eyelid

~~~~~~~~~~

honey I don't *try* and make entrances
I just walk into rooms; this Calabrian liquorice
replaces cigarettes, maybe black coffee too,
his family left a black vase at the necropolis
with two men dancing, epheboi, youths;
Gela, in December, a sea-falcon's chrysalis
in the steep brambles of a spring; a horse's head
lying boned on the ridge, white lace blossoming,
hyacinths, and narcissi
the sun set in its eye bones. Soil releases
early flowers, and strange beasts

/*/*/*/*/*/*

On her balcony over the beach-caves
Mari the artist taught us to say "Basta"
as she learnt in her Italian exile
what with the military junta. Her car was battered
as if she'd scraped along the cliff-face
on the coastal road from Athens; her husband
had criticised the finance minister or someone
at a taverna on Kriti, then had a heart attack
after coffee by the courtroom
at the subsequent trial for libel. His sculptures
were in the amphitheatre they'd created;
multi-limbed, multi-framed nakeds,
and paintings in the gallery, with sliding doors,
looking out at the Aegean islands. Stained-glass windows
in leaf shapes, the island vernacular; after coffees
she said "Hurry ..." (she had blue streaks in her hair)
"... the tempest"


🍂🌿 🍂🌿 🍂🌿

“Each part of the forest has a name,” she said,
“and you live in Ciappino;”
dark-trunked edge
of the mountain forest, gigantic temple
that catches sunsets * dense wall of columns
like whalebones sucking day-time
* exhaling vapour in the evening;
we all drank liquors in those mists
draped through the piazzas *
below her town, ruined city
with its two circular altars: one raised,
for Demeter, one burrowed
for her daughter Persephone: a stone socket
which you put your hand into
with vows for the underworld;
buried grain, buried flesh, buried metals,
all the underworld riches;
whereas in the forest earth, high wolf-beds,
the pre-city shelter
with wooden temples of owls
and glistening wet avenues,
you can’t bury things. The soil
stays wet, and writhing; if you
put your hand in, something would
reach out, and grab you

*Common Peplos*: (tribute to Aspasia and Pulp):


She came from Miletus, she had a thirst for knowledge;
she ghost-wrote Pericles' funeral oration saying
Athens was Hellas' college,
that's where Ionians
mixed with Pelasgians;
she told Pericles that her dad was loaded,
he said "In that case I'll act frugal in public
but at home, we'll have dough;"
and then in one Olympiad's time, she said
"I wanna tap the power of the common people,
those lads rowing for the Athenian Navy
and empire, wanna sleep with Alcmeaonid people,
I wanna sleep with squid-headed, wily leaders like you ..."
and so what else could Pericles do?
He said "I'll attack Samos then, honey, with triremes and crew."
He took her to the beach at Salamis
and said "We got the Persians here somewhere ...
so the Delian league started there."
He said "Oh, pretend you got no money,"
she just laughed and said "You're so funny."
He said "Yeah, but I can't see any of my Aegean subjects smiling."
"Are you sure...?"
You wanna rule with common people?
You wanna do whatever common people vote?
Wanna city fairly nice to foreigners?
Wanna society open, clever and free ...
But the Spartans didn't understand ...
They just fought very well on land.
Have a brothel, go to court,
teach rhetoric by the port,
drink some wine and play kottabos;
pretend you never caused the war on Samos;
still you'll never get it right,
cos you're a female, ostracised,
like your daddy was before,
and Pericles building a wall,
oh yeah;
you'll never live like the patriarchal
sons of Hellenic patriarchal religions do,
you'll never fail like a beleaguered leader,
you'll never move a treasury and take all the loot;
and the slaves dance and sing and screw
cos there's nothing else to do-hoo-hoo
aow!
Sing along with your lyre, or 'cithara'!
Sing along and it might just get you through!
Laugh along with the Alcmaeonid people,
laugh along even though they're cursed
and their line ends with you,
and the historic things you do,
because you think being Athenian is cool.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspasia

⦿ ⦿ ⦿ ⦿

deep tunnels into Rome
like hoods of the city/
engine hammering the sunshine
like a shadow-gun/
climbing out on golden
arched spirals of the city,
freezy wind blew over Aidone
and the Sicilian island, taking mist in its teeth
and revealed the city like a shark's tooth
rising from the waving earth below Etna
encrusted with white buildings,
like a treasure trove/
Neuvo-Dorian? Huh,
there was no Dorian invasion from outside
when the bronze-age burnt to its foundations,
the Dorians were living in the mountains
and came down after the fires,
Myceneans had been asking for trouble, the Trojan War
one last folly, destructive death-drive,
slaving raids took boys and women (Paris taking Helen),
drought, climate change and so on,
everything shattered, everyone lost or dead / Odysseus / Aeneas /
Ajax / Achilles / Carthaginian Dido


✺◆✺◆✺◆

she had green-gold eyes
as full as the rest of her
she was Greek Sicilian, black hair
and pulled up with her boyfriend/
I was photographing the sanatorium in the forest,
long lens/ from the slopes by the town, spilling/ golden

<>Twin Peaks: her masterpiece on VHS / my past lives, in the river’s hinterland<>


(For RC with love)
I found a ring in the pocket
of my mother’s old coat
buried in the hallway cupboard;
she said she’d hid it from herself
so that she wouldn’t pawn it.
I was born among the Victorian terraces.
The Wates estate I moved to, after the divorce
down on the flood fields,
its derelict shops in the precinct,
at night I dreamt it was one giant building
connected by staircases
with rotting swimming pools between its levels,
and my father’s flat in the tower block
was an empty control-room;
and other times I dreamt I was sleeping
in the bathroom of my mother’s place,
green mould by my head/ and water,
the previous occupant
left scary pictures of the Madonna
amongst the spiders.
At eleven I had a series of dreams
of a past life. I was from a carehome
which burnt down traumatically
and I died of an overdose
in the underpass
of a hilltown in Surrey, in 1986,
the year I was born in.
*
Why hadn’t I gone to the comprehensive school
in Richmond like my brothers?
Where my brother went out with the girl
who played Barry’s daughter in Eastenders.
I disliked the boys’ school in the forest:
I was visibly poor, "eccentric", though “Really good at English”,
(the same yeargroup as Jamie T was;)
I went out with Rachel from the youth club.
She lived in the Victorian terraces I’d come from;
I felt I recognised her … from a park or carnival …
Then I dumped her, horribly,
on her family’s answering machine
from a phonebox; I did self-destructive
stupid things, such as
at lunchtime, at thirteen, bringing vodka
to the panelled hall of the private school;
weed, whiskey and cough medicine making me vibrate
alone before the youth club;
deciding to educate myself
only by watching late-night Channel 4 films;
walking through the streets of Woking
I bought *Golden Brown* by The Stranglers,
which seemed buried in my memory.
At fourteen I gave up my funded place
at the private school, the year 2000,
thinking I was in
a Lindsay Anderson film, or *Loneliness
of the Long Distance Runner*.
The comprehensive school I chose instead
on the marshes below the woodland
was like a ruin of the welfare state,
something from *Kes*
or a giant soviet airship
sunk in the sandy gravel:
the scent of poppers,
smoke from my nostrils of
*Mayfair* cigarettes almost floral; a thousand people
forced to get on together;
in Maths I drilled a hole with scissors
slowly through my table. I thought about long hair
and knickers. I was poisonously anxious
vis-a-vis getting my **** out with someone.
I listened to *Another Morning Stoner*
and tried to write poems capturing
how the busy hallways felt abandoned.
The ex-students were eerie souls
trapped behind the mossy glass
in strange rooms of machinery,
in the echoes of the old gymnasium,
in the <<Stranglers>> graffiti in the theatre
or <<WAREHOUSE TRANCE 1979>> scratched onto my table,
or on the field
under the concrete, where it was written
‘I died here’. And sitting by that concrete
with graffiti of an open eye
was Rachel from the youth club.
*
She was a Gemini,
with walkman playing jungle music.
I can still see the transitions
of her face, her gestures,
her lips open by the bus window;
(are we still the same people
all these years after, if we keep these gestures?)
or her movements and her anger
surrounded by the fluid crowds
during her fight in the playground.
Eyeliner and speed garage.
Pencils keeping her hair together
after an art lesson.
I was always thinking about her.
She knew all these strangers
from the skate park in Kingston
and unheard-of places. That way she sat
with her legs folded under. (Later on
she would burn my letters.) She was thirteen
with many lives, many secrets;
2001. I had had unrequited passion before but
that’s the first time I ever fell in love.
And I only realised in 2015
that she was a *Twin Peaks* obsessive.
If no-one else ever got that, darling,
here you go. I got it.
When we were lounging in her bedroom
near the gated wasteland of quarries
and dead rivers
me afraid to kiss her
and wondering how I could get my thing out
somehow without anyone seeing,
she was re-creating scenes
and ripping off dialogue; how she had a notepad
for everyone she knew, each one filled
with her impressions of that person.
And she gave her own twist to it:
for me, she couldn’t write one.
What, I was too mysterious?
Thank you.
Rachel you were Laura Palmer.
Who was I meant to be?
Aah, the boy who is a writer
and never leaves his house. Harold Smith.
Aah yes
sweety you had it perfect
it was your masterpiece, I love you for it.
You couldn’t have planned it better.
Harold Smith also ended up cutting himself.
I did it when we went with the youth club
on a residential trip to my old private school
and I smuggled in beer
and graffitied my name everywhere: “I came back here”.
And maybe her overdose (a very harsh substance)
was some kind of tribute to Laura Palmer.
But to hear she was on a stomach pump,
from Amy at the school bus-stop
opposite the precinct,
I felt more a stranger than a boyfriend.
*
She moved to my Wates estate
after a divorce, as I had done.
From the Victorian streets
to the river chasm.
She combed the banks with rough kids,
or held court in the precinct,
and in the summer when I finished school
I joined them, and we had a fling,
pretty final,
and the river moved with a massive
silent, wasted surface
that was alien to us, stranded,
and the other Barnaby died
crashing his Vauxhall Nova
with the Burberry seat covers.
They threw cocaine in with the coffin.
That summer was too long and open.
That black cat of hers. When she drew my eyes
in one of her letters. Her rucksack on and
in short shirt-sleeves/ carrying her blazer
in her hands folded. (This has all vanished.)
At sixteen I went to college in Thames Ditton,
a local boy, and met the glamorous kids
who commuted across from Richmond, how exotic
(Richmond, foreign borough of my father’s
fabled council estate)
with parents in TV and music;
I left her behind, for wholesome Hannah
from Hampton, over the river from my estate,
whose father was a BBC cameraman
(though I still read the Gemini horoscopes
in the free paper); that's the last I saw of Rachel.
I was adopted by artists and musicians
although I couldn’t see myself as interesting,
I was very quiet, made of stone,
the only one from the comprehensive
in the hinterland of the river,
from that island surrounded by
many secret streams
and unchartered commons,
the leafy eyot
of sail-makers’ fields, churchyards,
industrial estates
and wastelands.
*
You were so lucky, to do all that living.
You couldn’t resurrect a dead boy who
was haunted by his dreams.
You had evening rendezvous,
I recorded films from television
and moved furniture around my room.
And *Five Easy Pieces*, *Walkabout*,
I found these films beautiful
but they were not as dark, as suggestive,
as relationship-driven or as emulative
as yours, as *Twin Peaks* was;
and although it scared me
to hear of the girls you’d slept with
when we were still ’together’,
and although you made up that horrible lie
for attention, jesus that was low,
that I’d *hit* you —
so that Amy’s brother, a pirate radio DJ
with a gun apparently in a biscuit tin
who lived two streets away on the estate
said he’d smash my teeth in —
despite all this, I have to admit,
*Twin Peaks*, you had good taste there,
and you had a life to live
(you said you walked with life’s rhythm,
that was how you met so many people),
a dead boy on your hands afraid to get his **** out,
you had your masterpiece to make
inspired by VHS
but made of people;
and those afternoons in your bedroom
when you asked me for the names of French painters
as if I might know them
they can never be taken,
and that day, taking the Hampton ferry
from its jetty at the edge of my estate
and walking through towering reservoirs
and boundaries of trees
into the walled gardens we found
upriver in Sunbury,
with the unseen brass band playing,
walking in the hollows, the walled expanse
of dried grass and mounds there,
like an abandoned, secret, ornamental park
and sat under the giant tree
spreading into the deep sky
my world changed,
so I carved BT heart emoticon RC
and buried the lid of a coke bottle,
I can still feel that kiss,
and I escaped into the sky,
its hidden, open, distant landscapes,
into another life,
and heaven was under her black T-shirt,
and her mixtape with *All Apologies*
by Nirvana:
I was alive by the end of the decade Rachel
and I’ve done a lot of living. Often with my **** out.
She had red and brown hair;
her personality was purple;
life cannot be any different.
Divorces etcetera.
She had her reasons.