Still Life with Waterfall


By Eamon Grennan

Graywolf Press

Copyright © 2002 Eamon Grennan
All right reserved.

ISBN: 1-55597-363-9


Chapter One

DETAIL I was watching a robin fly after a finch - the smaller bird chirping with excitement, the bigger, its breast blazing, silent in light-winged earnest chase - when, out of nowhere over the chimneys and the shivering front gardens, flashes a sparrowhawk headlong, a light brown burn scorching the air form which it simply plucks like a ripe fruit the stopped robin, whose two or three cheeps of terminal surprise twinkle in the silence closing over the empty street when the birds have gone about their own business, and I began to understand how a poem can happen: you have your eye on a small elusive detail, pursuing its music, when a terrible truth strikes and your heart cries out, being carried off. AFTER RAIN See how our big world turns tiny and upside down in raindrops on thorns of gorse: along the lane to the small harbour the hedges are empty of leaves and everything has a flayed, scrubbed look, antique and about to be new, the brusque wind flailing branches, declaring change, a change in the weather that must unsettle us, too, who persist inside its loops and mazes, unable to see straight, unable to forecast tomorrow or the day after, only able to remember what happened: the air scenting to freshness, a sense of calm coming down, of getting to the other side of turbulence, of things being touched for once to wholeness; that somehow nothing bad could happen. UP AGAINST IT It's the way they cannot understand the window they buzz and buzz against, the bees that take a wrong turn at my door and end up thus in a drift at first of almost idle curiosity, cruising the room until they find themselves smack up against it and they cannot fathom how the air has hardened and the world they know with their eyes keeps out of reach as, stuck there with all they want just in front of them, they must fling their bodies against the one unalterable law of things - this fact of glass - and can only go on making the sound that tethers their electric fury to what's impossible, feeling the sting in it. SILENCE The word "consort," poor penny, keeps coming back. Raising both arms behind her, she kept stroking her neck and raising her hair up. For coolness. Meanwhile he went on asking for water, trying to unparch his charred throat. For what hasn't been done, there is this void, a space filled with mourning in silence, the way an animal or a bird - not knowing what it is - will fill a space its own size and outline in the daily world, and will be every moment all that. "Soul," as we say, may be something like it, a space that has shaped itself to the shape of what's gone and not returning. Let's see: should he test all the doors; will the locks he's put in place spring open? There is this distilled thing, gin-light, and the glass is ice. That, for the moment, takes care of the words. Now he may sit in silence. He may swallow his tongue. COLD MORNING Through an accidental crack in the curtain I can see the eight o'clock light change from charcoal to a faint gassy blue, inventing things in the morning that has a thick skin of ice on it, as the water tank has - so nothing flows, all is bone, telling its tale of how hard the night had to be for any heart caught out in it, simple flesh and blood no match for the mindless chill that's settled in, a great stone bird, its wings stretched stiff from the tip of letter hill to the cobbled bay, its gaze glacial, its hook-and-scrabble claws fast clamped on every window, its petrifying breath a cage in which all the warmth we were is shivering.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Still Life with Waterfall by Eamon Grennan Copyright © 2002 by Eamon Grennan. Excerpted by permission.
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