‘Come inside, you must. You must.’
I let Natasha walk into the kitchen as I undo my boots by the front door. Her house is broad and, I think, grand for my liking, so I let her pass into the body of the building whilst I untie my laces and tremble slightly from my knees. Something has happened, and, for a moment, I remember why I am here, but nothing lasts for me. There is now not a little bit that I remember of my journey here, but I feel Natasha knows more than I can, and her invitation inside is dominating my present state.
My boots are off, and I gain the kitchen and there is her mother. I struggle out a hello, but try also to appear calmer than I think I am. The mother is arranging some bottles on a shelf above a wooded cupboard. I follow the trends of her fingers as she slides a glass about, trying to find its position. Natasha has told me her mother is drastically neat always, and this one statement is sitting like a leadweight in my head so I’m doing my best to stand very straight and nod carefully, like a learned antiques dealer deliberating something only he would know. She hands me a wide brown bottle. It says Peroni on its label, in white writing on a red background. I do not know if it’s new or old, but the mother tells me it is the Italian style of bottle and she likes very much to collect these things. My smile has cracked before I realise it, and she is currently smiling back. Despite her neatness, I don’t think she yet minds me being here. I don’t think I’m being untidy.
The room glows yellow and I notice that the kitchen has a door, and beyond the door is a green garden. There is grass and I am now outside to watch Natasha as she lies down. I caught a glimpse of her while I was still in the kitchen, and I saw a boy with her which made me upset. I suddenly felt overwhelmingly homesick, but now I’m outside I can see that the boy is actually a girl, but she has thick legs that push out at her dark, thin jeans and I don’t really notice her face although her hair is most likely a dark brown. She is not attractive at all, she even looks like an unkempt, greasy boy but Natasha’s hair is blonde and she is skinny like me. Not skinny because underfed, but rather, she must be built that way.
Natasha is on the grass which is raised above me. No, not above me, but about waist-height; so it’s only above half of me. I don’t know why they are doing this, but the boyish girl is being held by Natasha. Perhaps they are in love. But I will not stay here because the mother has just called for me. Back inside, the kitchen I notice has a tall ceiling and the walls are half bottle-green and half cream coloured, but they are well-suited I think and everything seems much better and tidier than me. But I am not expensive, at all.
‘Come here, and see,’ the mother says to (hopefully) me.
Now she is not holding any bottles or glasses. Now she is holding a can and outwards she is pouring the beer and – this must be – it is falling into a glass, a pint glass, and I am holding it.
‘Drink up!’ she glitters a smile at me ‘its such a pleasure to drink a cold beer when outside it is so hot,’ she is whispering to me and her lips fold in the middle downwards and yes, again I watch her smile. I almost throw the glass to the floor because she is being so lovely, and her heart must be so warm because there are broad veins in her arms and I breathe in the scent of her skin and she smells like hot Monday lunchtimes at school. I look to check the glass is in my hand and not broken in pieces everywhere on the floor, or worst even, cutting her feet, or any bit of her. Or even me. But I never get cut, really. I am trying to keep in order for her.
‘And will you take anything to eat?’ The mother asked. Natasha was inside now also. I had watched her bury her face between the boyish-girl’s thick legs that shuddered like wet rubber. But now she was inside, now she was quite next to me.
‘Just buttered bread,’ I replied. Still, I cannot believe really that butter comes from a cow. I can’t grasp that at all. But it appeals to me in a sensuous way and anyway Natasha’s hair is butter-coloured and I do, in my own single way, want to bring scoops of it up into my mouth because she let me come inside and despite the boyish-girl, I really do want to fuck her. But do I really? No. I want to melt inside her, so I ask for buttery bread please and think about Natasha as I bite it. As the butter melts on my tongue I think I know how beautifully she tastes.
Monday, 6 September 2010
Tuesday, 31 August 2010
Division (2)
This is the second part to the poem I posted at the end of March. It didn't take five months to write, I just left a draft stagnating for a while and have only recently thought to actually finish it.
Division (2)
Look through the lens of a compound microscope
and see the fabric of all living things.
With dish set down
and lamp clicked on
it is visible:
a parent cell,
magnified 100 times,
with a cellophane cytoplasm
and a nucleus; a womb that nurtures
the chaos of chromatin.
From this inert interphase to prophase:
The paired centrosomes part,
linked by microtubule arms
that stretch across the cytoplasm,
clasping hands tightly, making an arch for dancers.
The chromatin then coils into chromosomes,
condensing scribbles into four stringed worms.
In prometaphase the nucleus splinters
like a broken glass bubble,
and the strings morph into
butterflies with DNA wings;
they fly out and
stick to the spindle flowers.
Metaphase is simple:
the butterfly chromosomes are
pushed in line,
and in anaphase they are
ripped in half, the spindles
snapping them back like bungee cords.
In telephase the cell divides,
reaching the final stage of this
split story: cytokinesis.
The two daughters drift apart and
piece themselves together;
the chromosomes wrestle
until they entangle,
and an envelope
curls around them like a shell:
one nucleus, one heart,
and two living cells.
Monday, 16 August 2010
Canned Heat
They were on what must have been one of the last trains to nearly to arrive at Oxford Road Station. Outside the day was thinking about a turn toward a darker form. It would start off from the hills and then take the long road back into the city just as the last of the traffic raced home to beat it. Outside it was the still the great sweat of the summer that just wouldn’t leave off. But it wasn’t as muscular these days and not so demanding of one’s time. People had been wrestling with it for months though. They had hated it and loved it and now they seemed to pity it. Sorry that it had to go, but accepting of that fact as something quite inevitable like run-down batteries or slipping wallpaper. It had been welcomed, especially at first, but like many welcomed too readily and with too much zeal it had soon forgotten itself, got drunk on its own self-involvement and stayed far too long. It was self-inflicted then and was all anyone talked about anymore. They couldn't help talking about it. It waited all day long on the pavements demanding to be addressed. It dozed on park benches so that no-one else could sit down. It ranged across entire buildings so that windows seemed to melt away in giddy shimmers. It sat on cars and then inside cars. It was immobilizing. It was diurnal but waited up all hours. And now even at its lesser strength it still blazed a way into ‘C’ carriage making everyone tired and irritable. Now, looking out of the windows the passengers had nothing but shear jealousy for those hazy houses that came galloping up close to the line with what seemed like instinctive knowledge that a great rush of wind would follow that train and drench every swollen brick in diesel-coolness.
Wednesday, 2 June 2010
Pastoral
They ask for a pastoral scene
so I give them an industrial wasteland
with a bluebell growing out of the rubble
clutching the concrete like a child crying out for its mother.
so I give them an industrial wasteland
with a bluebell growing out of the rubble
clutching the concrete like a child crying out for its mother.
Wednesday, 12 May 2010
Patrick Perrysloe
of the blossom tree blown utterly naked by the wind.
He thought his father’s hands were now his own
and he used them as a mask with which to watch behind
what seemed to him to be the ending of the world.
Nothing would hinder the pink lot becoming dark.
The loss of the white flaking bundles.
Flowers wet and teeming, seeming to aim just for him
his cloth hat, his strong calfs and for his mouth, like confetti might.
As if all the world was shaken up yet glassed tightly and filled full
of this stuff, this air filling blossom.
A single button made-tight but by time made-loose
sprung-free from his coat when he stood.
Hitting the bench and rolling under.
See how these fixities can all of them fling themselves from you
at will, with something like that wicked button-confidence.
Patrick Perrysloe: world forgotton.
His door was dark and peeling pale.
Letters behind it gathering for him and one other.
He was a strange sort of sad like the bee
that stays too long to see the death-show
of all that he had once begot.
Nothing for it now but get drunk on the fallen fermenting fruit.
Or die close-curled within the yellow flute of a daffodil.
See his wooden table all waxed in that particular and beautiful brown.
So clean but for one corner worn soft and dull by his nights
of smoking pipe-tobacco or listening to the radio
or to his CD’s: Gieseking, Bach, Mozart, Mahler.
History books piled high even to hide the laptop that some son had
bought for him long ago promising to show him how.
He stood and prepared himself two cups.
Opened the door into the backyard
where he’d built a small shed eight years ago.
Where once he came home and found a crack-head almost dead inside.
And now he checked it all the time and imagined inside
what was never there again.
His thoughts turned back to the tea.
First cup he took milky, the other tea brewed in its black leaves.
Ripped tea-bags halved and fainting and fainting over in the breeze.
Her old pills there by the china bowl, still.
Eighteen 500mg capsules of morphine,
15gms of Fucidin Cream for the scars.
For a long time now he’d a sneaky suspicion
that this, her last dosage went to the toilet.
Replaced with sweeteners or paracetamol or both.
That she’d wanted all the horrible pain of it in the last instance.
He opened a low unit and stepped a foot inside to reach better.
He found the plastic lid and felt the embossed script and numbers there.
But he slipped, fell and hit the floor.
The medicine tub tumbled and split apart despite all the seals
And hard white bits of her came out and dropped like blossom
Against the unnatural kitchen sky.
Or so they looked from the floor to him, Patrick Perrysloe.
Each one pill a little white hill of her for him to climb.
He tasted one expecting sweet, but no – better, like morphine.
He tasted more as they came rolling by.
If they touched the blood they stopped dark and vanished.
She’d died in no pain at all and the good pills had killed her well.
And now they killed him, not fast but very slow.
Manchester
Manchester - somewhere between Salford Crescent and Manchester Piccadilly is a house that has been there forever. Long enough to watch the city unfold for miles around it. From canal-ways to motorways. It's been watching from its privileged vantage point. Not so tall as to be noticed much by anyone on the street, yet not so small as to be smothered entirely by the ever-growing city. It gets just enough light. The train-drivers know it. They cannot remember a time when they did not know of it. They eye the house suspiciously as they near, changing gears, slowing down even to a crawl half-dreading the dark mass with its puckered brickwork. They imagine how the constant vibrations of the trains might be forcing away the dry cement, making it crumble and move and that one day it could all come tumbling down on top of them, taking the raised track with it. But it hasn't yet and they forget about it as soon as they pass, for though it is a-part-of, it stands apart. Like how trees sometimes have gates erected too near and since the stubborn gate metal won’t budge and the tree just can’t help growing the tree ends up absorbing the gate. So the house seems absorb, to crouch quite underneath the railway but lean in dramatically as it nears the tracks and then rises above it so that the two structures almost meet or even do meet. So passing-by the train windows darken in the shade of the house and though they are not conscious of the reasons why the passengers stand and ready themselves to leave. What they do know is that something old and strange has passed and that they are now more or less in Manchester.
Sunday, 28 March 2010
Division (1)
Look down through the scope of a God
and see the canvas of your creation.
Backlit in bright light
on a plastic square
it sits:
a single cell,
a bubble, an eye,
a dimpled drop of life
outlined in black.
Its shadowed centre
stares silently back
and across its soft surface
are moon crater marks
where atom-sized astronauts
have cell space-walked.
This comet, this planet:
inert and unmoving
yet born from nothing.
Now its boundaries are bulging
the cell it is growing
expanding
ballooning
but squeezed in the sides,
pinched in the middle,
and still it gets bigger
but its body is strained
and a rupture rips downwards,
tearing right through it,
and splitting two cells
slowly apart
now only a bridge
connects them together
a stem, a bond,
a hand holding on which
bursts in a last bubbled kiss
as the parent gives birth.
Two cells, two hearts,
a beginning, a start:
a child, a cancer
a mother, a monster.
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