POETRY

BACKSTORY

Ella Yeivin was taught to play the piano

by her mother in pre-war Poland.

Her parents were musicians in what was then

Lvov, previously Lemberg, now Lviv.

They were active in the Jewish Labour Bund.

 

Ella survived Auschwitz. They did not.

She never spoke of it. Still in her teens,

in a DP camp in Schauenstein,

she organised a children’s choir.

They would sing in their many languages.

When her US visa came she was

reluctant to leave her little singers.

 

She lived first in the Bronx, with the family

of a distant cousin of her father.

She looked after the children, and began

to teach piano. With the reparations

she was able to buy a top floor apartment

with an upright in Brooklyn Heights,

long before it became fashionable.

She was a good teacher. Her young students,

and even their mothers, never complained

about the six floors they had to walk up.

 

She would sometimes think of their apartment

on Ruska Street in Lvov – always

imagining it sunlit and empty.

She never married. Briefly each day

she watched pedestrians on the wide walkway

crossing Brooklyn Bridge. She saw the Twin Towers

rising in Lower Manhattan – and lived

long enough to see them fall.

 

 

THERE IS AN EDGE BIG CITIES HAVE

For Mary Clark

 

There is an edge big cities have. I sense it

even in this airless ground floor hotel room

with its net-curtained windows that are locked

‘For your Safety and Peace of Mind’. Outside,

on the pavement below the window

is a beggar, cross-legged. He and the street

furniture are the only still things

in the broad avenue of six-lane traffic

and seemingly innumerable

and unstoppable humans of all ages,

conditions, ethnicities, and genders.

When I lie on the bed I can hear beneath me

the timetabled and metallic rhythms

of the metro; imagine the carriage lights

flickering on the tunnel walls; the strangers’

faces, alert, circumspect, preoccupied.

 

A week ago, I passed a school of dance.

Through the open skylights I could hear

the rehearsal piano, and the soft fall

of nubile ballet shoes on a sprung floor.

Returning to my hotel, I wandered

through a street market, and watched two young men,

with up-country accents, who were selling –

from the back of a horse box, unmarked

except for spatters of drying yellow mud –

a large stuffed black bear and a penny whistle.

 

Yesterday, among residential streets built

when empires were official, and the clerks

who kept their ledgers rented houses here,

I came by chance to one where an exiled

poet had lived and died. Trying to reach

the border with her small son, pursued

by armed frontier guards through a forest,

he had been shot, and bled to death in her arms.

I remembered lines from the only poem

she had published about this city:

 

…a place, for me, of possibilities

and fear. I cannot imagine its borders.

I cannot walk home. There is an absence,

a melancholy, a wistfulness,

a nostalgia: as if I had just missed

something special – a window unobtrusively

made fast, a door easing shut; someone’s

library glimpsed from a passing bus;

the surprise of a marble statue

of a child behind a neglected park’s

locked gates; above abandoned warehouses

and wharves, an unwarranted sunrise.

 

 

MANHATTAN PSYCHO

When we stayed at the Roosevelt Hotel –

mid-town on Madison and 45th –

in the ’90s we guessed it was much

as it had been when it first opened

in the ’20s, apart from the peeling

décor and service from central casting.

It was popular with South Americans,

whom, it was rumoured, were stingy with tips

so the Yellow Cabs by-passed the entrance.

In the Gents off the lobby I heard

the fabled Manhattan rhetorical

question: ‘Did somebody die in here?’

 

When the lights at 45th and Madison

showed red a young man on roller blades

produced a gizmo and turned them green.

On Madison Avenue – that highway

of catchphrase and hyperbole – we passed

one man saying to another about

a third: ‘He’s not got a pot to piss in!’

 

The windows were single-glazed so we woke,

on our first night, at four, hearing what we thought

were revellers in the street. Through the rear

of Grand Central Station kitchen staff

and cleaners – multi-lingual commuters –

were arriving from Queens and Spanish Harlem.

 

We breakfasted in the Gobi Deli,

now gone, round the corner on Vanderbilt.

The walls were postered with large, explicit

diagrams of the Heimlich manoeuvre –

as if choking were part of the menu.

 

We had seen no one on our corridor

throughout our three night stay. When we checked out

the door of the room opposite was open.

The plaster on all of the walls had been gouged,

hacked as if with an axe.

 

 

EMPIRE STATE

Before the viewing galleries were encased

in bullet-proof glass from ceiling to floor

there was wire mesh – with interstices

big enough through which to aim a lens,

and for Manhattan’s airs to freely pass.

Wannabe jumpers were deterred and jokers

keen to fly a kite above Fifth Avenue.

 

Late one sunny October afternoon,

when the leaves had begun to turn, we saw,

as felons might in an exercise yard,

the islands – Roosevelt, Staten, Liberty,

Ellis, and Manhattan itself – reduced,

and the sun begin to set over Jersey,

Ohio, the imperial geometry

of the states, a sentient jigsaw –

and imagined, as prisoners might,

autumnal prairie grass in Kansas,

eagles above the snow-line in the Rockies,

neon-lit diners on Sunset Boulevard.

 

 

HOME THOUGHTS

Lake Michigan reached beyond the horizon

like a sea in the pale September haze.

I watched the silvery waters stretching

towards Canada’s vastnesses, Greenland’s ice,

the North Atlantic, the Irish Sea.

A long dead Chinook salmon nudged the pier,

it scales barely glinting in the morning light.

On Michigan Avenue a parade

of Mexican social clubs passed by,

the air dense with bullhorns and mariarchi bands.

In the Art Institute of Chicago

I stood before Caillebotte’s large canvas

‘Rue De Paris: Temps De Pluie’ with its

dark clothed bourgeois couple – the man

moustached, holding a black umbrella,

the woman pretty, her arm in his. They are

looking across the rain filled street at something

we cannot see. And I thought of the print –

quarto sized we mounted and framed – that hangs

by the garden door in the hall. The couple

look forever at the door’s bright glass.

 

 

 

 

PACIFIC BATHOS

We are going to observe the California

Sea Lions – those celebrated aquatic

mammals – at Pier 39, Fishermen’s Wharf,

San Francisco. We walk from the Handlery

to Union Square then board the street car

at 3rd & Kearny and descend, past

the Dragon Gate in Chinatown, left

at the Ferry Building and so to the Pier –

a place of family entertainment, with

a floating restaurant and two tier

carousel. On the marina’s wooden pontoons

families of sea lions bask. To our surprise

they smell like a freshly opened and

very large tin of anchovy fillets preserved

in brine. To our further surprise nobody

else seems to have noticed, or to care.

 

***

 

Out of the fretwork shadow of the Bay Bridge

dominating the office window,

away from Kaspar Gutman and Wilma Cook,

from Iva Archer and Ruth Wonderly,

away from the cable cars’ ratchet and clang,

the horns in the distant bay, down a side street,

out of the fog, and into the grilled meat

fug of gossip, the Lucky Strikes

and waiters’ bustling hustle at John’s Grill,

Sam Spade orders chops, baked potato

and sliced tomatoes – in two dimensions,

always black and white, ten point or ten foot high,

celluloid or paper, like the city

always friable and combustible!

 

***

 

From the stretch of water between the

Maritime Museum and Alcatraz,

brown pelicans rise like tawny galleons.