1
Birch
The birch boughs
do not stir or sigh
though the world
is spinning.
Oxford, March 1998
2
Here Comes The Spring I’d Stop
Here comes the spring
I’d stop,
the buds
I’d freeze
before they fleck
the hedgerows to a haze of green;
here comes
the shining grass,
the bulbs,
the early blossom,
the tips of growth
swelling unstoppably
on the ends of branches
everywhere;
this is the spring
I’d halt,
returning time to a time
before we knew
you were to die,
so we could play those days
over again,
painless and manageable,
discreet carriers of a world
we could understand,
and of a god still one of love.
England, March 1998
I’m Not The Exile You Know
I am not the exile
you know,
thrown up
by a distant coup,
thrown off
by a war,
thrown out
by a sudden dictator,
yet my country
has vanished too,
its room reclaimed
from far away,
its colours no clearer
than I can keep them,
its daily patterns traced
behind each day.
Oxford, May 1998
With Micky
Tonight
the air is dark and smooth;
we sit
recovering,
the room muffled,
cooled
by an air-conditioner;
and how I need you,
your still arms,
your sound,
your smell,
and tonight,
especially, your love,
your fingers
brushing my forehead
lightly,
brushing it, bringing back
a lost fortress
amidst the pain.
Aswan, April 1998
Daylight
Now
the summer
does not wait,
will not wait,
cannot;
nothing stops
the light
flooding ahead,
flushing out
the end of day
London, May 1998
How Do I Make You Laugh
How do I make you laugh
when the bad news
will ever come,
when you tell me
that she fell on the half-step,
or could not sleep,
or slept too much;
how do I make you laugh
when you tell me
she could not eat,
that it is harder
to find the air
to make the words
she wants to say;
that the machines
have side effects,
that now the drugs
do nothing,
that she is dying,
fully awake,
in greatest need,
yet always – always – as she is:
how do I make you laugh then,
when our world is broken?
Oxford, May 1998
Being There
Sometimes
this early summer
has tricked me out of grief,
fetching me into a world
where the disease
has retreated,
taking with it
each terrible promise
in its long, random decline;
you move in your wheelchair still,
but the fear of losing you
has been pushed back
at least a dozen years:
you can still enjoy the garden,
travel,
watch your grandchildren
grow a little older,
enjoy the ordinary rituals of love
- and be there –always – for me.
Oxford, May 1998
Tiger
Hourly your dying
lies between us,
a crouching tiger
poised
- even as we hold you –
when you struggle to rise;
when you fight to rest;
Oxford, June 1998
Where I Am
You are not dying here.
From where I am
I see you walking
on the terrace
above the Adyah,
kicking water in an
L-shaped pool,
playing tennis
on the court
by the banyan tree.
you are not dying here;
London, July 1998
Station
I expect you now,
this evening,
at this – and every - station,
walking out
to greet me,
your simple movement
claiming each platform,
each airport, home;
each city, town and village;
claiming each space -
for us, forever;
I expect you now;
I expect you here.
Plymouth, July 1998
What If
What if
what you
wanted
you had?
What if
what should be
was;
what if?
What then?
Oxford, August 1998
Remembering
It’s not my pain
that hurts,
but time,
moving again
just next door;
the voices of children
rise and fall,
call,
as you struggle for breath.
It is time that hurts.
Time.
Oxford, August 1998
Phone Call
Although your fingers
move a little less
your strong voice
fills the phone,
charges the line,
charges me.
You are not old enough
to be dying;
stay:
you cannot go.
Oxford, August 1998
This Lovely Month
This lovely month
is full of death;
how do I hold
the day,
to halt the night
I dread?
Oxfo...
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