New Poems





Now that my book, Clearing Ground, has been published, the poems are off the web and in print....

but here's what I've been writing recently.

Click here to go to my main site.


 

Smashing up the Grand Piano

draft 9 22.4.04

In Grandma's house when we arrived on leave

the grand piano yawned and woke from two years' sleep

and bared its gleaming teeth – black-gapped and white –

sprawled out, a friendly beast across the sunny parlour floor.

 

There was a box of sandstone bricks

for building castles by the fire. We had a

satisfying way of making thunder for our cannon

with a fist of lower keys until the staircase thundered too

with Mummy's tread: “Don't touch it!” and we stopped.

 

The whole house hummed the taut strings' tune

when Daddy played sonatas on the last night in that room

– every note touched lovingly like trembling light and air –

and Mummy leaned with eyes that gleamed

and smiled that wicked smile behind the curtain of her hair.

 

When Grandma died the grand piano

swelled its bulk to fill the tiny Highgate flat,

absorbed the little light and bullied all the crowded room.

 

Its lid was weighted shut with books and wedding photographs -

my mum and dad both still alive in black and white,

the old ones dead and fading faintly into yellow like the pegs

that filled the grand piano's wide and sulky mouth.

 

Then at the end of summer mum was sick

and no-one came to tune the strings.

 

Father banged out booming muffled thunder -

angry rock and shaky ragtime tunes,

holding the pedal down for far too long.

And then the music stopped.

 

My mother died that English spring, the age I am today.

My father went abroad to work. We cleared the flat.

The bits and books were taken home, or sold

or carried to the skip that we had hired. We drank.

The old piano - Boosey - had a name that fit the time

but no-one wanted it or had the room.

 

Some smudgy men appeared and fingered what

was left. They wanted fifty quid we did

not have to haul it down the path. They'd take

it to the tip, or so they said. It stayed.

 

At first it was screwdrivers and blisters on our palms.

The lids. The legs and pedal spindles. The body on the floor

and all the length of keys and hammers dragged

and twisted out and lugged along the path.

Varnish thick with polish, immaculate for all those years, clawed.

Then other hammers and a borrowed saw. We smashed it up.

 

I keep with me a dozen stubs of keys –

a memory like my mother's jaundiced skin.

 

The night before she died her eyes were closed

and thunder – really – rolled far off. Of all

the many light and loving words she spoke

only the last three remain: “Don't touch me”.

 

Half a world and life away my mother's

wedding photograph is here, upon my wall –

the eyes alert, direct, not weak; about

to wrinkle in a smile, about to reach

the mischief round the mouth – about to speak.

 

Martin Alexander

Hong Kong, April 2004

 


  This page was made on a Mac by Martin Alexander on 23rd May 1999 and updated on the 23rd April 2004.