GOING WITHOUT SAYING


Your beard, though grown long and matted,

retained its ginger streaks.

Visiting after the second stroke

I’d become used to your silence:

a mind withdrawing, seeking

in the still life of washing up, some pattern.

Going without saying.

 

Yet we talked more easily then

in that drab assessment unit.

Our currency whatever fragments

came to mind: random Italian,

the Ministry of Food, buses –

Midland Red and the Outer Circle.

In glimpses from a splintered mirror,

side by side my unasked questions.

 

Had there been no qualms

about that no-helmet nine-year-old 

riding pillion on your Lambretta?

I gripped tightly as I could.

In later years, as high summer dawns broke,

did you return to bed

after dropping me to ring birds in the marshes?

Reductio ad mediocritatem:

why, on your Vienna Garrison pass,

had you jotted that?

 

And how heavy had that projector been?

Ferried home, and followed

by reels in foot-wide storage cans

to show, when the film was threaded,

Far From The Madding Crowd

on our front room wall.

You were surprised I knew of your uncle,

him in the Irish Post Office:

ever the sceptical, “I doubt it”.

 

Yes, there were cracks in the varnish:

a suspicion of nurses, counted

two by two on fingers.

The insistence that doors be left open -

and in your pyjama pocket, fifty pence for phone call -

to be always sure of escape.

Each thin-socked, shuffled step placed

painstakingly before the next.

Going without saying.

 

Further on. You’re sucking tea through a straw,

head so stooped that I must crouch

to meet your eyes.

Few words. My hands clasp yours,

by thickened nails the hold’s returned.

I kiss your freckled crown,

the hair on tissue paper skin cropped close.

 

Yesterday there was no grip left.

Pupils rolled under lids,

your eyes dry.

Full shaved again after thirty years

I see revealed in skeletal cheeks,

revenant, your own father’s face.

Come without knocking.

 

You always said the darkest hour

comes just before the dawn.

Our moon now is a clipped nail -

last thing to stop growing –

and that sky finger of five red lights

splits the black horizon

of goodbye, tears gathering

at the crossroads of ten to four.

 

No more debate turning

on the sixpence of a word’s interpretation.

Nothing would be a lesson

if it didn’t come too late.

As morning breaks you’re laid flat,

comfortable for first time in weeks.

Gone without saying.

 

 

 iii.2013 – iii.2020

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