Read North Online

Authors: Seamus Heaney

Tags: #nepalifiction, #TPB

North (2 page)

BOOK: North
9.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
II
 

These are trial pieces,

the craft's mystery

improvised on bone:

foliage, bestiaries,

 

interlacings elaborate

as the netted routes

of ancestry and trade.

That have to be

 

magnified on display

so that the nostril

is a migrant prow

sniffing the Liffey,

 

swanning it up to the ford,

dissembling itself

in antler combs, bone pins,

coins, weights, scale-pans.

 
III
 

Like a long sword

sheathed in its moisting

burial clays,

the keel stuck fast

 

in the slip of the bank,

its clinker-built hull

spined and plosive

as Dublin.

 

And now we reach in

for shards of the vertebrae,

the ribs of hurdle,

the mother-wet caches---

 

and for this trial piece

incised by a child,

a longship, a buoyant

migrant line.

 
IV
 

That enters my longhand,

turns cursive, unscarfing

a zoomorphic wake,

a worm of thought

 

I follow into the mud.

I am Hamlet the Dane,

skull-handler, parablist,

smeller of rot

 

in the state, infused

with its poisons,

pinioned by ghosts

and affections,

 

murders and pieties,

coming to consciousness

by jumping in graves,

dithering, blathering.

 
V
 

Come fly with me,

come sniff the wind

with the expertise

of the Vikings---

 

neighbourly, scoretaking

killers, haggers

and hagglers, gombeen-men,

hoarders of grudges and gain.

 

With a butcher's aplomb

they spread out your lungs

and made you warm wings

for your shoulders.

 

Old fathers, be with us.

Old cunning assessors

of feuds and of sites

for ambush or town.

 
VI
 

'Did you ever hear tell,'

said Jimmy Farrell,

'of the skulls they have

in the city of Dublin?

 

White skulls and black skulls

and yellow skulls, and some

with full teeth, and some

haven't only but one,'

 

and compounded history

in the pan of 'an old Dane,

maybe, was drowned

in the Flood.'

 

My words lick around

cobbled quays, go hunting

lightly as pampooties

over the skull-capped ground.

The Digging Skeleton

After Baudelaire

 
I
 

You find anatomical plates

Buried along these dusty quays

Among books yellowed like mummies

Slumbering in forgotten crates,

 

Drawings touched with an odd beauty

As if the illustrator had

Responded gravely to the sad

Mementoes of anatomy---

 

Mysterious candid studies

Of red slobland around the bones.

Like this one: flayed men and skeletons

Digging the earth like navvies.

 
II
 

Sad gang of apparitions,

Your skinned muscles like plaited sedge

And your spines hooped towards the sunk edge

Of the spade, my patient ones,

 

Tell me, as you labour hard

To break this unrelenting soil,

What barns are there for you to fill?

What farmer dragged you from the boneyard?

 

Or are you emblems of the truth,

Death's lifers, hauled from the narrow cell

And stripped of night-shirt shrouds, to tell:

'This is the reward of faith

 

In rest eternal. Even death

Lies. The void deceives.

We do not fall like autumn leaves

To sleep in peace. Some traitor breath

 

Revives our clay, sends us abroad

And by the sweat of our stripped brows

We earn our deaths; our one repose

When the bleeding instep finds its spade.'

Bone Dreams
 
I
 

White bone found

on the grazing:

the rough, porous

language of touch

 

and its yellowing, ribbed

impression in the grass---

a small ship-burial.

As dead as stone,

 

flint-find, nugget

of chalk,

I touch it again,

I wind it in

 

the sling of mind

to pitch it at England

and follow its drop

to strange fields.

 
II
 

Bone-house:

a skeleton

in the tongue's

old dungeons.

 

I push back

through dictions,

Elizabethan canopies.

Norman devices,

 

the erotic mayflowers

of Provence

and the ivied latins

of churchmen

 

to the scop's

twang, the iron

flash of consonants

cleaving the line.

 
III
 

In the coffered

riches of grammar

and declensions

I found ban-bus,

 

its fire, benches,

wattle and rafters,

where the soul

fluttered a while

 

in the roofspace.

There was a small crock

for the brain,

and a cauldron

 

of generation

swung at the centre:

love-den, blood-holt,

dream-bower.

 

IV
 

Come back past

philology and kennings,

re-enter memory

where the bone's lair

 

is a love-nest

in the grass.

I hold my lady's head

like a crystal

 

and ossify myself

by gazing: I am screes

on her escarpments,

a chalk giant

 

carved upon her downs.

Soon my hands, on the sunken

fosse of her spine

move towards the passes.

 
V
 

And we end up

cradling each other

between the lips

of an earthwork.

 

As I estimate

for pleasure

her knuckles' paving,

the turning stiles

 

of the elbows,

the vallum of her brow

and the long wicket

of collar-bone,

 

I have begun to pace

the Hadrian's Wall

of her shoulder, dreaming

of Maiden Castle.

 
VI
 

One morning in Devon

I found a dead mole

with the dew still beading it.

I had thought the mole

 

a big-boned coulter

but there it was

small and cold

as the thick of a chisel.

 

I was told 'Blow,

blow back the fur on his head.

Those little points

were the eyes.

 

And feel the shoulders.'

I touched small distant Pennines,

a pelt of grass and grain

running south.

Come to the Bower
 

My hands come, touched

By sweetbriar and tangled vetch,

Foraging past the burst gizzards

Of coin-hoards

 

To where the dark-bowered queen,

Whom I unpin,

Is waiting. Out of the black maw

Of the peat, sharpened willow

 

Withdraws gently.

I unwrap skins and see

The pot of the skull,

The damp tuck of each curl

 

Reddish as a fox's brush,

A mark of a gorget in the flesh

Of her throat. And spring water

Starts to rise around her.

 

I reach past

The riverbed's washed

Dream of gold to the bullion

Of her Venus bone.

Bog Queen
 

I lay waiting

between turf-face and demesne wall,

between heathery levels

and glass-toothed stone.

 

My body was braille

for the creeping influences:

dawn suns groped over my head

and cooled at my feet,

 

through my fabrics and skins

the seeps of winter

digested me,

the illiterate roots

 

pondered and died

in the cavings

of stomach and socket.

I lay waiting

 

on the gravel bottom,

my brain darkening,

a jar of spawn

fermenting underground

 

dreams of Baltic amber.

Bruised berries under my nails,

the vital hoard reducing

in the crock of the pelvis.

 

My diadem grew carious,

gemstones dropped

in the peat floe

like the bearings of history.

 

My sash was a black glacier

wrinkling, dyed weaves

and phoenician stitchwork

retted on my breasts'

 

soft moraines.

I knew winter cold

like the nuzzle of fjords

at my thighs---

 

the soaked fledge, the heavy

swaddle of hides.

My skull hibernated

in the wet nest of my hair.

 

Which they robbed.

I was barbered

and stripped

by a turfcutter's spade

 

who veiled me again

and packed coomb softly

between the stone jambs

at my head and my feet.

 

Till a peer's wife bribed him.

The plait of my hair,

a slimy birth-cord

of bog, had been cut

 

and I rose from the dark,

hacked bone, skull-ware,

frayed stitches, tufts,

small gleams on the bank.

The Grauballe Man
 

As if he had been poured

in tar, he lies

on a pillow of turf

and seems to weep

 

the black river of himself.

The grain of his wrists

is like bog oak,

the ball of his heel

 

like a basalt egg.

His instep has shrunk

cold as a swan's foot

or a wet swamp root.

 

His hips are the ridge

and purse of a mussel,

his spine an eel arrested

under a glisten of mud.

 

The head lifts,

the chin is a visor

raised above the vent

of his slashed throat

 

that has tanned and toughened.

The cured wound

opens inwards to a dark

elderberry place.

 

Who will say 'corpse'

to his vivid cast?

Who will say 'body'

to his opaque repose?

 

And his rusted hair,

a mat unlikely

as a foetus's.

I first saw his twisted face

 

in a photograph,

a head and shoulder

out of the peat,

bruised like a forceps baby,

 

but now he lies

perfected in my memory,

down to the red horn

of his nails,

 

hung in the scales

with beauty and atrocity:

with the Dying Gaul

too strictly compassed

 

on his shield,

with the actual weight

of each hooded victim,

slashed and dumped.

Punishment
 

I can feel the tug

of the halter at the nape

of her neck, the wind

on her naked front.

 

It blows her nipples

to amber beads,

it shakes the frail rigging

of her ribs.

 

I can see her drowned

body in the bog,

the weighing stone,

the floating rods and boughs.

 

Under which at first

she was a barked sapling

that is dug up

oak-bone, brain-firkin:

 

her shaved head

like a stubble of black corn,

her blindfold a soiled bandage,

her noose a ring

 

to store

the memories of love.

Little adulteress,

before they punished you

 

you were flaxen-haired,

undernourished, and your

tar-black face was beautiful.

My poor scapegoat,

 

I almost love you

but would have cast, I know,

the stones of silence.

I am the artful voyeur

 

of your brain's exposed

and darkened combs,

your muscles' webbing

and all your numbered bones:

 

I who have stood dumb

when your betraying sisters,

cauled in tar,

wept by the railings,

 

who would connive

in civilized outrage

yet understand the exact

and tribal, intimate revenge.

BOOK: North
9.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Smart Dog by Vivian Vande Velde
Red Bird's Song by Beth Trissel
Valley of Thracians by Ellis Shuman
Men by Marie Darrieussecq
Pastime by Robert B. Parker