Authors: Helen Dunmore
Three workmen with blue pails
swerve past an election poster
wrapped round a lamp-post pillar,
signed with a single carnation
and a name for each ward.
The workmen guffaw –
it’s five past three on a small street
which traipses off Unter den Linden
deep into East Berlin.
Short, compact and bored
they tramp over the slats
where the pavement’s torn up.
One of them’s telling a joke.
They swing on under a banner
for a play by Harold Pinter –
stretched linen, four metres wide
and at least two workmen tall,
spread on a ten-metre wall –
the play’s
The Dumb Waiter
.
They go on past a kindergarten
which is tipping out children,
past banks with bullet-holes in them,
past an industrial shoal
of tower-block homes
to the second-right turn
where the pulse of street-life picks up,
where there are people and shops.
Ahead, a queue forms
as a café rattles itself open
and starts to serve out ice cream.
Inside his treacle-brown frame
a young man flickers and smiles
as he fans out the biscuit-shells –
already half the ice cream’s gone
and the waiter teases the children
with cold smoke from a new can.
Seeds stick to their tongues –
gooseberry, cloudberry – chill,
grainy and natural.
Shoving their caps back
the workmen join on
and move forward in line
for what’s over. Tapping light coins
they move at a diagonal
to a blue, skew-whiff ditched Trabbi.
The room creaked like a pair of lungs
and the fire wouldn’t go
till we held up the front page for it.
All the while the news was on
that day they wired up the Wall
while I was swimming on newspaper –
a cold rustle of words
to the wheezing of my sister.
I caught the fringe of her scarf
in winter smogs after school
as she towed me through the stutter
of high-lamped Ford Populars
and down the mouth of the railway tunnel
into water-pocked walls
and the dense sulphurous hollows
of nowhere in particular.
It was empty but for smog.
Coughing through our handkerchiefs
we walked eerily, lammed
at the brickwork, picked ourselves up.
I walked through nowhere last April
into a mist of brown coal,
sulphur emissions, diesel
stopped dead at the Wall,
the whiff of dun Trabants
puttering north/south
past a maze of roadworks,
leaving hours for us to cross
in the slow luxury of strolling
as the streets knit themselves up
to become a city again.
By instinct I kept my mouth shut
and breathed like one of us girls
in our “identical-twin” coats,
listening out for rare cars,
coal at the back of our throats –
it was England in the fifties,
half-blind with keeping us warm,
so I was completely at ease
in a small street off Unter Den Linden
as a fire-door behind wheezed
and Berlin creaked like two lungs.
Your dry voice from the centre of the bed
asks ‘Is it safe?’
and I answer for the days as if I owned them.
Practised at counting, I rock
the two halves of the month like a cradle.
The days slip over their stile
and expect nothing. They are just days,
and we’re at it again, thwarting
souls from the bodies they crave.
They’d love to get into this room
under the yellow counterpane
we’ve torn to make a child’s cuddly,
they’d love to slide into the sheets
between soft, much-washed
flannelette fleece,
they’d love to be here in the moulded spaces
between us, where there is no room,
but we don’t let them. They fly about gustily,
noisy as our own children.
Big barbershop man turning away,
sides of his face
lathered and shaved
close with the cut-throat
he always uses,
big barbershop man turning away,
helping the neighbours
make good, sweating
inside a stretched t-shirt
with
NO MEANS YES
on the back of it,
waltzing a side of pig,
taking the weight,
scalp like a glove
rucked with the strain,
big barbershop man turning away
trim inside like a slice of ham
big barbershop man
hoisting the forequarter,
fat marbled with meat
stiff as a wardrobe,
big barbershop man
waltzing a side of pig
striped like a piece
of sun awning, cool
as a jelly roll,
big barbershop man waltzing the meat
like a barber’s pole on yellow Main Street.
It was not always a dry well.
Once it had been brimming with water.
cool, limpid, delicious water,
but a man came and took water from the well
and a woman came and took water from the well
and a man took water from the well again
and the well could not drink
from the low, slack water-table.
The well lacked a sense of its own danger
and a man came to take water from the well
and a woman came to take water from the well
but as the man was coming again
the well sighed in the dry darkness,
the well spoke in a quiet voice
from the deep-down bell of its emptiness
Give me some water
.
But the man was at work with his heavy bucket
and he cried cheerfully,
Wait half a minute,
I will just draw one more bucketful!
When he swung it up it was full of dust
and he was angry with the well.
Could it not have held out longer?
He had only needed one more bucketful.
It’s evening on the river,
steady, milk-warm,
the nettles head-down
with feasting caterpillars,
the current turning,
thin as a blade-bone.
Reed-mace shivers.
I’m miles from anywhere.
Who’s looking?
did a fish jump?
– and then a heron goes up
from its place by the willow.
With ballooning flight
it picks up the sky
and makes off, loaded.
I wasn’t looking,
I heard the noise of its wings
and I turned,
I thought of a friend,
a cool one with binoculars,
here’s rarity
with big wing-flaps, suiting itself.
One yellow chicken
she picks up expertly and not untenderly
from the conveyor of chickens.
Its soft beak gobbles feverishly
at a clear liquid which might be
a dose of sugar-drenched serum –
the beak’s flexible membrane
seems to engulf the chicken
as it tries to fix on the dropper’s glass tip.
Clear yellow juice gulps through a tube
and a few drops, suddenly colourless,
swill round a gape wide as the brim of a glass
but the chicken doesn’t seem afraid –
or only this much, only for this long
until the lab assistant flicks it back on
to the slowly moving conveyor of chickens
and it tumbles, catches itself,
then buoyed up by the rest
reels out of sight, cheeping.
I’d climbed the crab-apple in the wind
that wild season of Cuba,
I leaned out on the twigs
to where clouds heeled over like sails
on the house-bounded horizon,
but even from here I felt the radio throb
like someone who was there when the accident happened
‘not two yards from where I was standing’,
then Big Band music cha-cha’d from room to room
to fill in time between news.
At school we learned ‘Quinquireme of Nineveh
from distant Ophir…’ The ships nudged closer.
The wind roared to itself like applause.
Dropped yolks of shore-lamp quiver on tarmac –
the night’s disturbed and the sea itself
sidles about after its storm, buttery,
melting along the groynes.
The sea’s a martinet with itself,
will come this far and no farther
like a Prussian governess
corrupted by white sugar –
Oh but the stealth
with which it twitches aside mortar
and licks, and licks
moist grains off the shore.
By day it simply keeps marching
beat after beat like waves of soldiers
timed to the first push. In step with the music
it swells greenness and greyness, spills foam
onto a fly-swarming tide-line –
beertabs and dropped King Cones,
flotsam of inopportune partners
sticky with what came after.
A man lies on his back
settled along the swell, his knees
glimmering, catching a lick of moonlight,
lazy as a seagull on Christmas morning –
He should have greased himself with whale-blubber
like a twelve-year-old Goddess-chested
cross-Channel swimmer.
His sadness stripes through him like ink
leaving no space or him.
He paws slow arm sweeps and rolls
where the sea shoulders him.
Up there an aeroplane falters,
its red landing-lights on
scouting the coast home.
The pilot smokes a cigarette.
Its tip winks with each breath.
We’re strung out on the plain’s upthrust,
bubbles against the sill of the horizon.
Already the dark folds each figure to itself
like a mother putting on her child’s overcoat,
or a paid attendant, who quickly and deftly
slots goose-pimpled arms into their stoles.
My own mother is attending to her daughters
in the Christmas gloom of our long garden
before the others are born.
A stream’s tongue takes its first courses:
in siren suits and our cheek-hugging bonnets
we put one foot each in that water.
Now standstill clumps sink and disappear
over the plate-edge of the world.
The trees hold up fingers like candelabra,
blue and unsure as the word ‘distant’.
Casually heeled there, we circle
the New Look skirts of our mother.
The attendant’s hands skim on a breast
fused into party-going ramparts of taffeta,
but he takes up his gaze into the hall
as if there’s nothing to be sorry or glad for,
and nothing in the snowy eternity
that feathers his keyhole.
In the corded hollows of the wood
leaves fall.
How light it is.
The trees are rinsing themselves of leaves
like Degas laundresses, their forearms
cold with the jelly-smooth
blue of starch-water.
The laundresses lean back and yawn
with their arms still in the water
like beech-boughs, pliant
on leavings of air.
In the corded hollows of the wood
how light it is.
How my excitement
burns in the chamber.
You’re breast-up in the bubbling spaces you make for yourself,
your head in the air, pointy, demure,
ridiculous in its petalled swim-cap.
You chug slowly across the pool.
Your legs trail. Your arms won’t sweep
more than a third of the full stroke,
yet when you look up you’re curling with smiles,
complicit as if splashed
with mile-deep dives from the cliff’s height.
A fat young man in
BERBER'S ICE CREAM PARLOUR
under a tiled ceiling the colour of farm butter
with a mirror at 45° to his jaw.
His moist jowls, lucent and young
as the tuck where a baby's buttock and thigh join,
quiver a little, preparing
to meet the order he's given.
A tall glass skims the waitress's breasts.
He holds on, spoon poised
to see if the syrup'll trickle right
past the mound of chopped nuts to the ice-
white luscious vanilla sheltering
under its blanket of cream.
The yellow skin weakens and melts.
He devotes himself,
purses his lips to wrinkling-point,
digs down with the long spoon
past jelly and fruit
to the depths, with the cool
inching of an expert.
Beside him there's a landscape in drained pink
and blue suggesting the sea
with an audacious cartoon economy.
They've even put in one white triangle
to make the horizon. A sail.
Large creamy girls mark the banana splits
with curls and squiggles,
pour sauce on peach melbas,
thumb in real strawberries.
Their bodies sail behind the counters,
balloons tight at the ropes, held down
by a customer's need for more clotted cream
topping on his three-tier chocolate sundae.
They have eight tables to serve.
With their left hands they slap out the change
and comets smelling of nickel
for kids' take-away treats,
and over on the bar counter there's room
for adult, luxurious absorption
of dark mocha ice cream.
Flowing, damp-curled, the waitresses
pass with their trays
doubled by mirrors, bumping like clouds.