Poem 205
Written in Menton in 2010, home thoughts from abroad and all that … but also as I was feeling my way into the project collaborating with Tim Finn that would become White Cloud which we produced with a band and actors at BATS Theatre in 2012 and was later toured by Tim as a solo show …
… when Tim expressed interest in doing something together I spent a bit of time thinking about what the commonalities in our lives were – and realised that we’d both been brought up in mid-North Island towns in a pakeha culture of the time … so we started making a show about what it meant to us to be pakeha – good and bad, old and new, sweet and sour … Tim wrote songs, I wrote spoken word sections and we pieced it together like a jigsaw organised on its own slightly mysterious cloudy intuitive internal thematic logic … the idea (which succeeded I think) was that the show was like a river, words flowed into songs and songs flowed back out into words – and sometimes synchronously my words were spoken over Tim’s music as with this piece that opened the show and was unaccompanied until a beautiful piano version of Tim’s White Cloud Black Shadow crept in behind … I loved the mood change that created and how it supported what I was writing about, it was really something special …
… most people have a house like this one which served as family home and however many years later they can still walk through it in their head … I intended my specific somewhat soft focus memories to spark same-but-different recollections in the audience, to welcome them into something that would become a shared experience …
… I can remember playing Tim’s early demo of this to my family in 2011 as we sat round my father’s bed in the last couple of days of his life …
21
My mother, passing through Rotorua on her honeymoon thought it was a dump but we came to live there you don’t get a choice when climbing the ladder of success at the TAB or when you’re born or fall to earth somewhere 21 Larch Street was the where my brother choosing the best bed in our long light room a tree in the corner of the yard we never knew the name of an oak I coaxed from an acorn that has long since pushed the bricks of the fence apart frost on that lawn thick icing we’d slide through in our bata bullets while my mother rapped on the cold windows you’ll kill the grass thirties house on the corner long lawns on the streets I cursed the mowing of flakes of volcanic glass black obsidian in the blinding white grit of our driveway on a seething summer day the haunted hunched garage with its oil-stained boards and oval portraits of some misplaced family from long ago sun rising red over the concrete boat across the paddock on a winter’s morning smell of sulphur in the rain smoke from the chimney the little door in the stucco to clean out the ashes spindly yellow and white fences where the great fish hung when my father came home triumphant letterbox and front steps waiting for School C results our tortoiseshell cat sleeping on the black and white tv whose turn to get up and remove her tail from the picture? the dark hall gloom of the middle room lit by the red eye of the freezer knowing in the middle of the night as long as I could see that red glow there was no black thing creeping up on me leaves falling from the liquid amber the oak and the nameless old tree fuchsia flowering by the back door blue hydrangeas would there never be lemons or grapefruits on the stunted shrubs? not everything thrived in pumice clay and topsoil in frost and sun where a horse bumped the bedroom window one or two mornings now the paddock was empty now built upon we lived in a city after all a man from the council knocked on the door with a plan to renumber us and place us in James Street all that day we didn’t know where we were spun free of our moorings he came back to say because we were on the corner we could have the choice we chose to stay remain ourselves forever 21 the key to the door the Yale lock of the front door of the house in Larch Street