Poem 38
This was a biggie in more ways than one … seventeen poems arranged in sequence it also marked a natural end to my years of writing and seeking to publish poetry as my life and priorities changed with the birth of my daughter, beginning to work in television writing, and concentrating on theatre with whatever time and energy I had left …
… published in Sport 3 in October 1989 To The Roughhouse is about the process of me becoming a father, starting before the birth and moving on through the first months of Katherine’s life …
… notes for each poem as follows …
i This time the screen showed it all refers back to the ultrasound scan in Ectopic Pregnancy (Poem 34) … this time would be different …
ii to the mother … the appropriate preconditions and launching pad …
iii thinking myself into the POV of the baby in utero – and the mysteries a couple of inches of skin and flesh separate …
iv true story about family (all that can go right and all that can go wrong) the tiny and vast contingencies between who you are and who you might have been … and for the becoming-parent who you are now and who you will be …
v I can remember coming home from a play workshop and having to polyurethane the cork kitchen tiles at one in the morning …
vi poised on the brink, looking backwards to look forward …
vii drama under cover of night …
viii birth as being messed with … the first time the question presents itself ‘Why can’t they all just leave me alone?’ …
ix the frightening largeness and peril of the world … fear gripped me … just the short journey home from the hospital was a white-knuckle ride …
(I could have ended this with ‘off of’ as in Ian Wedde’s Pathway To The Sea – but he’d kind of staked his claim on that … )
x a little adjustment going on … nice wordplay on change … and does that final couplet sum up a baby or what?
xi taking a wider (or deeper) view … continuity, transient permanence, families, houses … someone saw this regrowth on a site where a house had been removed and told me about how long gorse seeds can wait … to have a child is to realise you’re just stepping across the sun …
xii love brings fear … those first three months can be long …
xiii breath to breath, still the gulf between …
xiv it was a tree to mark the birth … more continuity and circularity …
( after publication in Sport I rethought the last line, scribbled a few variations on a green slip of paper I slid between the pages … all these years later I found the paper and took my own advice … )
xv a small mind … unfathomable and enjoyable …
xvi a rhapsody … black sand brilliant days and islands green in the sea has always resonated with me …
xvii not me or my son – who was still two years from being born … but something I saw once and bent to make the end-image of this voyage to come to see myself as a father …
To The Roughhouse
i (Scan -5 months) Who taught me to clap hands? I couldn't do it in the womb I know since I saw my baby flail and miss swimming through a fuzzed sea in a cupboard this time the screen showed it all feet hands virtually a face looking out of the grey waves and a heartbeat a perfect mechanism pumping like a limpet against the glass no thought of stopping ii (Still talking) I can't leave you alone and you can't leave me it's no wonder we get no work done we notice silence and track each other down what are you reading? what are you doing? remember … six years of remembers talking touching conversing even in our sleep this long discussion left off regathered the sound of your voice from another room across a corner of table sitting here suddenly I think it's a special occasion a holiday let's forget what we're meant to be doing have a cup of tea debate the death penalty all over again iii In the blank room of blood the world comes muffled through pipes distant clangings of actions and voices everyone wonders who's in the room who kicks back language through the walls? whoever it is has their suspicions they're not alone the flying saucers of our fingers bend her sky in our voices call her small planet through impenetrable cloud hello baby anyone home? sweet taste of blood in heavy syrup listen with all your new fish bones to the thunder … it's almost as if I was trying to tell you something iv Stephen's mother got put in Porirua for following a woman home and refusing to leave refusing to believe the light warm kitchen wasn't hers the cat and the children weren't hers that the woman standing dialing dealing with it all was entirely another person v What did you want to repaper the kitchen for anyway? here you are as big as a house in tears because you've made a mess of the stripping dirty tired and angry nothing done the bed not made hard yellow shavings of paper everywhere and you're heavy and you're clumsy and you haven't got enough money and I don't care about the kitchen and this baby bobbing about in all the frustration has just stripped away one more week making only five to go in the middle of the night those soft nails move in a kind of impatience and we do our best to do our best but she's coming whether the kitchen's ready or not vi (grandparents) During the early part of their marriage he would still jump on his bicycle and chase a fire engine when he was at work she was often lonely all day and it seemed strange she had to leave her mother for an empty house the first baby she had she held and cried how would she ever be enough? and the bicycle was sold for a car and the world changed amongst other things fires becoming far more formal invitation only vii We gardened in the dark for you pushed your seed well down swelling until our feet walked your season around the moon screeched up like an ambulance in its wet light we grasped your hair and pulled you came new potato of a baby slick with all our old oils viii You cut your lungs on light squeezed out of her heart's racket your whole collapsed universe people crowd into your life huge eager to struggle with you teach you a lesson you'll never forget welcome to the roughhouse I've seen you once before minus five months flipping perfect through your world you didn't know you weren't born ix (Te Mata Peak) I was afraid my brother would just step off because he was a teenager or that he would grab me and wrestle close to the edge the mountain was only half there the old head split and fallen a string of cars like drops of blood across the hairline the wideness appalled me the whole draughty butter-coloured world crammed into view how could you not fall when there was so much to fall off? x (She's staying on) There's three of us living here now already when she cries the cat doesn't bother to raise his head perhaps like me he imagines she's going home at the end of the week but it's too late there's the size of her luggage for a start the stuffed dogs and bears spindly baby furniture odd bootees between the cushions buckets of cold water and drawers of clothes labelled too large and too small it's too late there's no point getting used to her she's going to want change to do one thing different every day to leave nothing of this shitting french mustard waving beautiful fists xi When the house was pulled down after eighty years gorse sprang up on the bare rectangle of earth split straight out of seeds blocked by floors seeds ticking slower than footsteps holding faster than three families' shadows stepping across the sun xii (The four steps) 1 I look at her 2 more closely 3 place a hand across her body tunnelled under blankets 4 with the tip of a finger stroke her ear lightly, once she sighs she's still alive xiii From sleep suddenly she stutters into life an engine of grief our baby who never cries cries and cries and cries face bent and pulled into misery legs beating invisible scalding water nails trying to tear strips off pain lifting her her shrieks swarm with questions I feel her breath go hot into my shoulder xiv (Our house is an old house) We went to plant a tree and found a green china woman under the ground discomposed into pieces you gave her a wash in a saucer and I found the way her skirt fitted together no head or arms but a foot with very straight white toes put to dry on the new kitchen sill in the same century's slant of afternoon sun xv It only happens when her mother baths Katherine laughs xvi (for Katherine) Summer baby at the end of the land's lease rolling in crushed wax comb summer baby in the ploughed crisp furrow the fingerprint of a farm you're a tiny moving piece of shade summer baby adrift with the insects a lizard warming itself on your heart you find things to play with all ticking straw corn sunlight greasing chrome kissing bumpers to surf black sand brilliant days and islands green in the sea summer baby you swim wherever you are slow rivers and lounge tables moving whatever limb comes before your eyes determined to row this season behind you xvii A man lifts his baby to his shoulders and walks off down the beach swaying hugely like a Christmas tree with a fat angel the baby pisses down the broad back as if it's only his right to ride his father along the sand waves tapping at the distant ankles blond mane gripped in both fists