Robert Minhinnick
SUITE: GHOSTS & HAMMERS
1.
Make us a bow
of red sycamore
and an arrow
to shoot at the sun.
Tell us a story,
a witch in a wood
and two children
who knock on her door…
2.
But the children look back
and see the sand running out
of her. The red grains out. Of her.
Down the aisles she goes,
talking to strangers who sometimes talk back.
As if they are all in this together.
In it together as down
the aisles, she goes. Down the aisles.
Grapefruit, I see. The yellow, the pink,
but what she wants is bread for the birds,
the sliced white, the white sliced.
Not pittas, not muffins but the whiter still,
the whole, the half, the white sliced,
the sliced white, this bread for the birds,
batches and cottage loaves,
the white sliced, the sliced white.
No bread whiter now. No bread today so white.
Not pittas, not pikelets, flatbreads or sourdough…
While the children look back.
And wonder. At the neolithic princess
risen amongst them,
the sand running out of her,
the red grains out. Of her.
As the children look back. And wonder.
3.
We fitted stars
to your mouth
but you tried to cough them out.
I am always
going to remember that,
how you hid stars
in your cheek or under your tongue,
hoping we wouldn’t guess
they were unswallowed.
But those stars were
white full stops
to thought and dreams.
I’ve seen
the towers of famine in Glan Rhyd
but try to pretend
it’s different now
as we press other stars against your skin
and you cannot feel their light dissolve:
miraculous
morphine, its constellation
like the sword
of Orion you showed me,
a girl with stargazy
eyes, pointing to brickred
Beetlejuice,
its dazzling
azimuth.
No,
never not
unastonished I knew.
And that must
have been when
I looked up first.
4.
One day you ran for it,
found lodgings and the kindness of strangers
after three bus journeys.
But now you’ve lost weight your teeth don’t fit
and Albert’s ashes still wait
behind the tins of Whiskas.
How might we sweep away
the dust
of ourselves?
Inheritance?
Your outrage when the man next door
knocked down the martins’ nest.
My trajectory since.
You spoke of the one hundred
year old lilac in the hedge
with all the mauves
between white and purple,
but they’ve taken a chainsaw
to its heart
so instead it’s lovehearts I think of
in the sweetshop at the top of the hill.
5.
Every tide leaves
the sea’s exchequer
looted on the sands.
Here’s seaglass, white
and green, no edges or
angles but sucked
to milk-veined alleys
of vast schoolyard significance.
But that was in another life…
6.
In the papers she points to the news.
Every page the same, the terrible
pages always the same.
Down the aisles she goes, down the aisles.
To turn and ask have I seen
the story. On the terrible pages.
That little girl, she says. That little girl…
But now, the insurance, and now the aisles
of white goods. How they gleam,
the white goods in this refrigerator light…
So much money, she says. So much these days.
She who was brought up with, without…
Sand at her feet. The grains of red, of purple.
The scattered grains out of the dune,
sand in her eyes, sand around her mouth,
but what she wants is bread for the birds,
white bread in the aisles, bread from her hands
crushed into ashes, its paste in her hands,
bread and milk for the birds.
Ever hungry, the birds. Ever.
What’s white for the ravens must be white
for the swans…
But that little girl, she says.
That little girl. Grapefruit I see. The yellow, the pink…
7.
Her name spelled wrong
on the door.
But she is used to this.
She touches her face
and touches again
as if it’s hard to comprehend
her own blood’s
electricity.
That same volt
in the cup and the same volt
in the cordial
and the same volt
in the apparitions that crowd the walls.
Sulpuride
might be attar of roses
– this unpronounceable liquor –
as the world
– this world –
conspires.
Ghost and hammers,
hammers and ghosts.
It’s still the way we do these things.
8.
Make us a bow
of red sycamore
and an arrow
to shoot at the sun.
Tell us a story,
a witch in a wood
and two children
who knock on her door.
Laborious, the Latin
you learned, those lists
good only for graves or gods.
What was it for?
So make me a bow
of red sycamore
and an arrow
to shoot at the sun.