Elegy

Just round a corner of the afternoon, Your novel there beside you on the bed, Your spectacles to mark your place, the sea Just…

Just round a corner of the afternoon, Your novel there beside you on the bed, Your spectacles to mark your place, the sea Just so before the tide falls back,

Your face will still be stern with sleep

As though the sea itself must satisfy

A final test before the long detention ends

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And you can let the backwash take you out.

The tall green waves have waited in the bay

Since first you saw the water as a child,

Your hand inside your father’s hand, your dark eyes

Promising you heartbreak even then.

Get on with it, I hear you say. We've got no choice.

We left the nursing home your tired chair.

They stole the sweets and flowers anyway

And bagged your clothes like rubbish in the hall.

Here in the flat your boxed-up books and ornaments

Forget themselves, as you did at the end.

The post still comes. The state that failed to keep the faith

Pursues you for its money back. There's nothing worse,

You used to say, than scratting after coppers.

Tell that to the clerks who’d rob your grave,

Who have no reason to remember how

You taught the children of the poor for forty years

Because it was the decent thing to do.

It seems that history does not exist:

We must have dreamed the world you’ve vanished from.

This elegy’s a metaphysical excuse,

A sick-note meant to keep you back

A little longer, though you have no need to hear

What I must say, because your life was yours,

Mysterious and prized, a yard, a universe away.

But let me do it honour and repay your gift of words.

I think of how you stared into the bonfire

As we stood feeding it with leaves

In the November fog of 1959,

You in your old green coat, me watching you

As you gazed in upon

Another life, a riverside address

And several rooms to call your own,

Where you could read and think, and watch

The barges slip their moorings on the tide,

Or sketch the willows on the further shore,

Then in the evening stroll through Hammersmith

To dances at the Palais. Life enough,

You might have said. An elegant sufficiency.

There was a book you always meant to write.

You turned aside and lit a cigarette.

The dark was in the orchard now, scarf-soaking fog

Among the fallen fruit. The house was far away,

One window lit, and soon we must go back

For the interrogation to begin,

The violence and sorrow of the facts

As my mad father sometimes dreamed they were

And made the little room no place at all

Until the fit was past and terrible remorse

Took hold, and this was all the life we had.

To make the best of things. Not to give up.

To be the counsellor of others when

Their husbands died or beat them. To go on.

I see you reading, unimpressed, relentless,

Gollancz crime, green Penguins, too exhausted

For the literature you loved, but holding on.

There was a book you always meant to write,

In London, where you always meant to live.

I'd rather stand, but thank you all the same,she said,

A woman on the bus to Hammersmith, to whom

I tried to give my seat, a woman of your age,

Your war, your work. We shared the view

Of willowed levels, water and the northern shore

You would have made your landing-place.

We haven’t come this far to give up now.