Authors: Tony Harrison
and thunder tugging at my veins.
That Empire flush diluted is
pink as a lover’s orifice,
then
Physical, Political
run
first into marblings and then one
mud colour, the dirty, grey,
flat reaches of infinity.
The one red thing, I squat and grab
at myself like a one-clawed crab.
I
Africa – London – Africa –
to get it away.
II
My white shorts tighten
in the market crowds.
I don’t know
if a lean Fulani boy
or girl gave me this stand
trailing his/her knuckles
on my thigh.
III
Knowing my sense of ceremonial
my native tailor
still puts
buttons on my flies.
IV
I bought three
Players
tins
of groundnuts with green mould
just to touch your hand
counting the coppers into mine.
V
My Easter weekend Shangri-la, Pankshin.
I watch you pour the pure
well water, balanced up the mountain,
in blinding kerosene cans,
each lovely morning, convict,
your release date, nineteen years from now,
daubed in brown ink on your rotting shirt.
VI
My
White Horse
plastic horses carousel
whirls round an empty and my hell,
when the last neat whisky passes my cracked lips,
is a riderless Apocalypse.
VII
Water Babies
She hauls at his member like a crude
shaduf
to give her dry loins life, and calls it love.
She’s back in England pregnant. Now he can
flood the damned valley of his African.
VIII
Sex beefs at belled virginity. The wives
nag back at sex. Ding, Dong! Ding, Dong!
rings no changes on their married lives
clapping out
Love’s Old Sweet Song
.
What’s that to me? I can get a stand
even from maps of the Holy Land.
IX
Je suis le ténébreux … le veuf …
always the
soixante
and never the
neuf
.
X
It’s time for tea and biscuits. No one comes.
I hear the flap of Dunlop sandals, drums,
terrifying cries. My clap still bothers me.
Siestas make me dizzy. I stagger up and see
through mesh and acacia sharp metal flash,
my steward, still in white uniform and sash,
waving a sharpened piece of Chevie, ride
his old
Raleigh
to the genocide.
XI
The shower streams over him
and the water turns instantly
to cool
Coca-Cola
.
XII
We shake baby powder over each other
like men salting a spitroast,
laughing like kids in a sandpit,
childish ghosts of ourselves,
me, puffy marshmallow, he,
sherbert dusted liquorice
licked back bright
and leading into
Turkish Delight
.
XIII
Buttocks. Buttocks.
You pronounce it as though
the syllables rhymed:
loo
;
cocks
.
I murmur over and over:
buttocks … buttocks …
BUTOX
,
marketable essence of beef –
négritude
– dilute to taste!
XIV
I’d like to
sukuru
you.
XV
Mon égal!
Let me be the Gambia
in your Senegal.
Disjointed like a baobab,
gigantic first, then noonday blob,
my shadow staggers, lurches, reels,
elasticated at my heels,
then stretches out with its blind reach
way beyond the gasp of speech.
The wind’s up and our last weak light
dithers and lets in the night.
Shadowless, one dark hand flits
spiderwise for crusted bits
of Christmas candle, German
art
-
creation
wax with plastic Chartres
Cathedral windows, coloured light
evoking Europe till Twelfth Night
and aspirations from our dust
with no repository but lust.
Earthed so, lust like radar beams
bleeps for realities from dreams
out of darkness for the new, rich life,
the unmistakable pulsation – wife,
my blurred light in the blind
concentric circles of blank mind,
this blackout makes our flesh and bone
an Africa, a Livingstone.
Like galoshes going
vitch
…
vitch
… an Easter birch switch
going
vitch
… the fan slows
down and stops, dense mangoes
rustle and a Congo band sings
indigenous and Western things.
The crowds flock in, agog to feel
new
frissons
out of Brazzaville.
Novelties! Good drummers come
miles to hear a different drum
as men go to adulteries. Sounds!
Women! It’s the same. Our ground’s
stamped and rutted, so we choose
either to hog it in squelched ooze,
or get resurrection and find sties
most radiant with novelties.
My shadow’s back as if it could
smell lust steaming off my blood:
Fee, Fi, Fo, Fum,
this is my
Praeconium
.
Paging angels set down this
fastidious and human kiss;
and this; and this; and this; and set
down this, my
Exultet
:
Everything in this rich dark
craves my exclamation mark.
Wife! Mouth! Breasts! Thigh!
certe necessarium Adae
peccatum … felix culpa … O felix
dark continent of fallen sex.
Harrowing Christ! O Superlamb,
grown lupine, luminous –
Shazam
!
Not so bravado now, but bare
cold, and sober on a camel-hair
Saharan blanket. Tuareg guards
patrolling with their rusty swords
swing up a lamp and weldmesh
thief-bars check our flesh
gleaming: breasts; thigh; bum;
out of our aquarium.
Our fruitless guava quincunx
curvets on its supple trunks.
The candles in the empties flare
sideways in the stirring air
and then go out. The curtains soar
horizontal with the floor.
It seems a whole sea must pour through
our all-glass house at Samaru.
And now all’s dark and the first rains
splatter at the window panes,
flattening down ten rows of beans,
a bed of radishes. This means
no news from England, no new war
to heighten the familiar:
Nigeria’s Niger is not yet
harnessed to our wireless set.
‘We were not born to survive, alas,
But to step on the gas.’
(Andrei Voznesensky)
I
I’ll bet you’re bloody jealous, you codgers in UK,
Waiting for your hearses while I’m having it away
With girls like black Bathshebas who sell their milky curds
At kerbside markets out of done-up-fancy gourds,
Black as tar-macadam, skin shining when it’s wet
From washing or from kissing like polished Whitby jet.
They’re lovely, these young lasses. Those colonial DO’s
Knew what they were up to when they upped and chose
These slender, tall Fulanis like Rowntrees coffee creams
To keep in wifeless villas. No Boy Scout’s fleapit dreams
Of bedding Brigitte Bardot could ever better these.
One shy kiss from this lot has me shaking at the knees.
It’s not that they’re casual, they’re just glad of the lifts
I give them between markets and in gratitude give gifts
Like sips of fresh cow-juice off a calabash spoon.
But I’m subject to diarrhoea, so I’d just as soon
Have a feel of those titties that hang down just below
That sort of beaded bolero of deep indigo blue;
And to the woven wrapper worn exactly navel high,
All’s bare but for ju-jus and, where it parts, a thigh
Sidles through the opening with a bloom like purple grapes.
So it’s not all that surprising that some lecherous apes
Take rather rough advantage, mostly blacks and Lebanese,
Though I’ve heard it tell as well that it were one of these
That
white
Police Inspector fancied and forced down
At the back of barracks in the sleazy part of town.
Well, of course, she hollered and her wiry brothers ran
And set rabid packs of bushdogs on the desperate man.
He perished black all over and foaming at the mouth.
They’re nomadic, these Fulanis, driving to the South
That special hump-backed cow they have, and when they’re on trek,
They leave wigwamloads of women, and by blooming heck,
I drive in their direction, my right foot pressed right down
Laying roads and ladies up as far as Kano town.
Though I’m not your socialistic, go-native-ite type chap
With his flapping, nig-nog dresses and his dose of clap,
I have my finer feelings and I’d like to make it clear
I’m not just itchy fingers and a senile lecher’s leer.
I have my qualms of conscience and shower
silver
, if you please,
To their lepers and blind beggars kipping under trees.
They’re agile enough, those cripples, scrabbling for the coins,
But not half so bloody agile as those furry little groins
I grope for through strange garments smelling of dye-pits
As I graze my grizzly whiskers on those black, blancmangy tits.
I don’t do bad for sixty. You can stuff your Welfare State.
You can’t get girls on National Health and I won’t masturbate.
They’re pleased with my performance. I’m satisfied with theirs.
No! I think they’re very beautiful, although their hair’s
A bit off-putting, being rough like panscrub wires,
But bums like melons, matey, lips like lorry tyres.
They all know old Roller Coaster. And, oh dear, ugh!
To think I ever nuzzled on a poor white woman’s dug,
Pale, collapsed and shrivelled like a week-old mushroom swept
Up at Kirkgate City Markets. Jesus bleeding wept!
Back to sporting, smoky Yorkshire! I dread retirement age
And the talking drum send-off at the Lagos landing stage.
Out here I’m as sprightly as old George Formby’s uke.
I think of Old Folk’s England and, honest, I could puke.
Here I’m getting younger and I don’t need monkey glands,
Just a bit of money and a pair of young, black hands.
I used to cackle at that spraycart trying to put down
That grass and them tansies that grew all over town.
Death’s like the Corporation for old men back in Leeds,
Shooting out its poisons and choking off the weeds.
But I’m like them tansies or a stick cut in the bush
And shoved in for a beanpole that suddenly grows lush
With new leafage before the garden lad’s got round
To plucking the beans off and digging up the ground.
Yes, better to put the foot down, go fast, accelerate,
Than shrivel on your arses, mope and squawk and wait
For Death to drop the darkness over twittering age
Like a bit of old blanket on a parrot’s cage.
II
Life’s movement and life’s danger and not a sit-down post.
There’s skeleton cars and lorries from Kano to the coast;
Skeletons but not wasted, those flashy Chevie fins
Honed up for knife blades or curled for muezzins
To megaphone the
Koran
from their mud mosques and call
The sun down from its shining with their caterwaul.
But it’s not just native say-so; it’s stark, realistic fact;
The road’s a royal python’s dark digestive tract.
And I expect that it’ll get me one rainy season night,
That sudden, skating backwheel skid across the laterite,
Or a lorry without headlights,
GOD IS LOVE
up on the cab,
Might impale me on my pistons like a raw
kebab
.
Smash turned into landscape, ambulance, that’s that,
A white corpse starkers like a suddenly skinned cat.
As kids when we came croppers, there were always some old dears
Who’d come and pick us up and wipe off blood and tears,
And who’d always use the same daft words, as they tried to console,
Pointing to cobble, path or flagstone:
Look at the hole
You’ve made falling
. I want a voice with that soft tone,
Disembodied Yorkshire like my mother’s on the phone,
As the cook puts down some flowers and the smallboy scrapes the spade,
To speak as my epitaph:
Look at the hole he’s made
.
‘Chivo que rompe tambor con su pellejo paga.’
(Abakuá proverb)
I
Earth-brown Garden Bulbuls in the Bathurst graveyard trees
Sing, they say, ‘quick-doctor-quick’ or ‘fifty-nine degrees’.
God knows, but I’m drawn to graves like brides to baby-wear
Spending an afternoon ashore to see who’s buried there.
Ozanne, DO Blackwater Fever.
FAITHFUL UNTO DEATH
.
A commissioner, they say, who mustered his last breath
And went on chanting till he croaked the same damn thing:
A coffle of fourteen asses bound for Sansanding!