Poem 22
Imagining all times, religions and mythologies happening at once, every place with its story and its cycles, spirit fused to the world, overlaying the physical like a transparency …
… there’s a great sense of movement in this poem – flying, leaping, whirling, racing …
… Taras Bulba horsemen I got from a Tony Curtis film, the Hatu Patu stone is still by the highway in Atiamuri (recently attacked, police are looking for an angry woman with claws, if you see her you’re advised not to approach) …
… the engine dying under me at the scariest point on the map is true – the Mamakus a primal and unnerving range of hills and basalt tors outside Rotorua … Ted Bullmore was the art teacher at my school, a great artist and an early death …
The Spirit World
Carp are flying in the japanese wind deserts bloom before camera crews every ten years every sticky skull in the festival of death will be eaten and the mould broken full of pennies for children sleek buddhas dance the steppes are full of Taras Bulba horsemen leaping chasms old spirits of locus and genus returning using paper fish and flags for guidance I build stones over the bent head of this place a creek under pines put a wheel in the water to whirl out prayer wolves retake the winters of England racing to the outlands of London and the cumbersome talons of our own ancient eagle cross the sun again in broad daylight on the Atiamuri highway the bird-woman gouges a stone Hatu Patu laughing within I have felt the engine die under me midnight in the Mamakus the land of outcrops ravines choked with witches the volcanic country where Ted Bullmore painted death to know what he was dealing with I look out the window Miramar humps and splashes like a whale like an elevator the airport judders down the earthquake levels into the old old sea