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funicular

PRIMATES

The Cape Point funicular stops. A baboon

is squatting on the track, suckling its young.

Cameras click. We wait. Mother and child lope off

into the fynbos and the proteas.

We trundle down to the visitors’ centre.

 

On a path by the electrified fence

beneath the restaurant terrace, a baboon stalks.

Much further below and beyond is False Bay.

A distant whale breaches, and another –

then a destroyer passes, sailing

from Simons Town for the Southern Ocean.

 

Towards closing time the whole troop gathers

on a knoll above the perimeter fence,

the dominant male at the centre.

They wait. Meanwhile, he copulates twice.

 

There must be gaps in the fence. A young male,

bleeding, clutching packets of sugar,

is chased from the coffee shop, his pursuer

with a padded stick. Suddenly, the big male

is among us with the speed of a sprinter.

He knocks a young woman down, grabs her coke

and crisps, disappears. We are powerless.

A POET IN WARTIME

Nuns clambered on the headland. Like scarabs,

they traversed the sage slope of limestone

to the hermit’s shrine. Marine creatures, landlocked,

awaited the sea’s coming. The poet

descended by funicular to the bay’s

elegant crescent of hotels. Mists

trailed the foothills of distant peaks. In saloons

of bevelled mirrors, his comrades sang

marching songs. A love poem formed like breath.

 

He crunched on innumerable pebbles.

Waves gasped and sighed, smoothing the wooden groynes.

Two aircraft, high, high above, dived, banked, climbed –

a predatory bond of whining vapour loops

interlocked like wire – until a spurt of flame.

In smoke, one spiralled like some gross leaf

under the horizon. By the sea wall,

a cormorant lay dead: nearby, a page

torn from Treasure Island. Unexpectedly,

he returned to childhood – holidays

in small rooms with giant wardrobes and tall beds;

a flying boat landing from beyond the blue,

feathering the briny; expensive strangers

embarking for Samarkand; at the Grand,

legerdemain. The sea flowed oyster.

 

Teatime arrived with its obligations,

allotments, chapels and a woman

methodically descending a ladder.

Drizzle suffused the geometrical skies

of barrack windows. The grey tide rasped.

The night was full of girls he would never see.

Nuns dreamt of scaling paradise. Fossils

and saint were locked in their diurnal chambers.

The poet approached sleep, dreaming of

water – purposeless, unmade, fulfilling –

and lavender seeds – in the small, azure

pomander, locked away, safe from winter –

changing slowly into air.