Launch reading by Fleur Adcock, Tiffany Atkinson, Aoife Lyall & Susan Wicks
Fleur Adcock, Tiffany Atkinson, Aoife Lyall & Susan Wicks launch reading for their new poetry collections on 23 February 2021 is now on YouTube. Bookanista poem...
When it all got bad I couldn’t see an end
to it I couldn’t see how it would work out.
Am I going to die? I said. The nurse didn’t
bat an eyelid. Then
they were wheeling me to theatre bumping
down the old farm track I knew each rut and there
was the farmer sat on the bed with a sheep
and the dog. The dog
was on the floor and he wanted to sell me
the dog. This is what we were worried about.
So we talked it all the way through and when I
got back to the ward
I said Kathy Kathy turn off the fan it
smells of you know. Poo. It smells of shit. But the
smell got worse it was thick like a bandage I
couldn’t believe how
anyone could walk around in that. KATHY
I said and looked down into the valley where
there was a music festival I could see
the lights the dancing
and was terrified because they didn’t know
about the poo the shit and I was waving
waving standing on the bed and shouting out.
Then it did. It came
exploding through the valley in a thick wave
dreadful awful and they didn’t CARE They were
playing in it swimming and so forth chucking
it around breathing
it in Iesu mawr it was the most dreadful
the worst. Look I’m sitting here with tears in my
eyes just trying to tell you. But the nurses
they can make your life
a misery and it won’t even you know
be visible or they can save your life. It’s
a relationship and if you’re some grumpy
old scrote well I tried
to keep my manners even when you know. But
you don’t want to hear this let me try again.
That was the worst part and god help me love no
verse can come of that.
*
Neuropathy
Is it odd
that eighteen months
into his treatment
Dad’s neuropathy
(collateral from chemo
no sensation in his finger-
tips or feet
and irreversible
he cannot do his buttons
sense the dog’s fur
or stay on a bicycle)
subdues him more
than all the Gormenghast
of cancer? He’s
an army man
pragmatic as a horse
and he dislikes how I mythologise
It’s true
that in his illness
I have found a way of daughtering
that falters as he rights himself
but this is not King Lear
nor pain and all its gaudy wagons
but the dusty silence after
First rule said a triage nurse
the shouter isn’t necessarily
the worst-off Pain’s
a vital sign Look for the one
who’s drawn himself in
like a stone Look
for the one (from convent
Sundays thirty years ago
I’ve dredged up Father Damien
‘the lepers’ priest’) who
at the story’s turn
delivers implacably
the sermon on caritas
with one hand spitting
in the altar candle’s
flame
*
Consent
On the radio it wasn’t tyranny
she just said
all the men that have assaulted me in my life
have been nice guys
in a voice that made me think of when your finger
pushes through the cellophane and touches cool meat
FLESH you think with your flesh
I was cooking dinner like a citizen
The interviewer was like woah
I put the chicken down and walked outside
The lawn the herbs the ornamental tree
What a sharp and unexpected boredom
Have I Have I given my consent O lazy
girl if you don’t burn down suburbia
where can you go with a pretty mouth Who
will you bury in ankle-length yesses and pearls
Mum arises in the backdraft of my cigarettes
though so long into the dark herself she has
poor working syntax and is flat-out knackered
Kid she spells on the threshold Even the wind
that cannot read or bone a chicken knows its own mind
*
A line from the doctor (annotated)
We are trying to avoid the word pain
It is far too full of itself This
is less a problem of language
than a problem of belief
Anyone can tolerate a small scratch
Anyone can manage their discomfort
but tug on the root of peine/ poena/ poine
who knows what you might drag up
and blood-feud judgment hellfire torment
these are no longer medical concerns
Keep the language clean and well-lit
Leave its shadows swinging on the gate
Contents List
I Dolorimeter: 19 readings
11 /ˌdɒləˈrɪmɪtə/
12 Table 8.1: What makes patients anxious about gastroscopy
14 Heroin works
15 Found poem I
17 Accident & Emergency
19 Song of a pain
20 McGill Pain Questionnaire (annotated) please tick
21 Mr Broad’s morphine
23 Neuropathy
25 SOCRATES
27 Found poem II
28 A Biblical pain & an aside on bedside manner
30 Pranidhana
31 A line from the doctor (annotated)
32 Clean windows
34 A bad cold
35 Signs of the body: longitudinal sample at tea break
36 Last
38 The smokers outside Bronglais hospital
II
41 You can’t go there
50 The heart it’s true looks jaunty
51 Walking with Virginia
52 In this class
53 Mantras
54 The department of small arts
55 Consent
56 Dear Sam
57 It is a very gracious hotel
58 Workshop
59 Panels
60 There is no sexual relation
61 Hymn
62 Dog speaks
63 Categories of experience c. 2016
64 The poem Kolkata
65 Wire-seller, Lal-Bazar
66 Kalighat
67 Yoga
68 Parable
69 Postscript
70 21 points for a feminist essay on film
72 Burgeon
73 Neighbour
74 Experiment
76 Eggshell