Out of the Blue

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Authors: Helen Dunmore

BOOK: Out of the Blue
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HELEN DUNMORE
OUT OF THE BLUE

 

‘An electrifying and original talent, a writer whose style is characterised by a lyrical, dreamy intensity’ –
GUARDIAN

 

A celebrated winner of fiction’s Orange Prize, Helen Dunmore is as spellbinding a storyteller in her poetry as in her novels. As in her fiction, these haunting narratives draw us into darkness, engaging our fears and hopes in poetry of rare luminosity. Her poems also cast a bright, revealing light on the living world, by land and sea, on love, longing and loss.

 

Out of the Blue
presents a comprehensive selection from her seven
previous
books of poetry. It also includes a collection of completely new poems remarkable for their sensuous magic, sharp delicacy and sureness of touch.

 

‘One of this country’s finest literary talents’ –
DAILY TELEGRAPH

 

‘Dunmore gets a wonderful balance between delicate, exact, surprising
language
and very strong thought – which may be bitter, sardonic, or violent, tender, or wildly imaginative, but is always generous… A lovely poetic
electricity
runs through her poems’ –
SEAN O’BRIEN
&
RUTH PADEL
,
PBS Bulletin

 

‘This is a poet whose words can be savoured on the tongue’ –
IAIN CRICHTON SMITH
,
Glasgow Herald

 

‘At once intimate and strange…Celebrations mingle with apprehensions throughout this volume, which in a sense lights candles for the human journey, its homecomings, its departures, its comforts, its finalities. These are statements of faith as well as recognitions of our double nature, our fears and weaknesses’ –
PETER PEGNALL
,
London Magazine

 

COVER PICTURE

On Botallack Head, 6pm, 24.4.99, strong sun and westerly winds
by Kurt Jackson

(THE GREAT ATLANTIC MAP WORKS GALLERY)

CONTENTS

Title Page

Acknowledgements

 

Out of the Blue
(2001)

 

Out of the Blue

The man on the roof

Giraffes in Hull

Jacob’s drum

That old cinema of memory

Depot

A lorry-load of stuff

Virgin with Two Cardigans

Ice coming

Cyclamen, blood-red

Piers Plowman: The Crucifixion & Harrowing of Hell

Smoke

Bristol Docks

The spill

Without remission

The rain’s coming in

As good as it gets

If only

Mr Lear’s ring

Fortune-teller on Church Road

Sleeveless

The point of not returning

The form

The sentence

With short, harsh breaths

The footfall

The coffin-makers

Inside out

The blessing

 

FROM
Secrets
(1994)

 

Lemon sole

Christmas caves

That violet-haired lady

Whooper swans

Snow Queen

The cuckoo game

The butcher’s daughter

The greenfield ghost

Herring girl

Russian doll

Breeze of ghosts

 

FROM
The Apple Fall
(1983)

 

The marshalling yard

A cow here in the June meadow

Zelda

The Polish husband

The damson

In Rodmell Garden

The apple fall

Pharaoh’s daughter

Domestic poem

Patrick I

Patrick II

Weaning

Approaches to winter

The night chemist

St Paul’s

Poem for December 28

Greenham Common

Poem for hidden women

If no revolution come

A safe light

Near Dawlish

The last day of the exhausted month

The deserted table

The writer’s son

Ollie and Charles at St Andrew’s Park

Winter fairs

In a wood near Turku

Landscape from the Monet Exhibition at Cardiff

Breakfast

 

FROM
The Sea Skater
(1986)

 

The bride’s nights in a strange village

Christmas roses

I imagine you sent back from Africa

In memoriam Cyril Smith 1913–1945

The parachute packers

Porpoise washed up on the beach

In deep water

Lady Macduff and the primroses

Mary Shelley

The plum tree

The air-blue gown

My sad descendants

Patrick at four years old on Bonfire Night

The horse landscape

Thetis

In the tents

Uncle Will’s telegram

Rapunzel

The sea skater

In the tea house

Florence in permafrost

Missile launcher passing at night

 

FROM
The Raw Garden
(1988)

 

Code-breaking in the Garden of Eden

Seal run

Wild strawberries

A mortgage on a pear tree

A pæony truss on Sussex place

Permafrost

At Cabourg

Ploughing the roughlands

The land pensions

A dream of wool

New crops

Shadows of my mother against a wall

Air layering

The argument

The peach house

A meditation of the glasshouses

The haunting of Epworth

Preaching at Gwennap

On circuit from Heptonstall Chapel

US 1st Division Airborne Ranger at rest in Honduras

One more for the beautiful table

Lambkin

Dublin 1971

The hard-hearted husband

Malta

Candlemas

Pilgrims

An Irish miner in Staffordshire

 

FROM
Short Days, Long Nights
(1991)

 

Those shady girls

The dream-life of priests

Sisters leaving before the dance

On not writing certain poems

Privacy of rain

Dancing man

At Cabourg II

Baron Hardup

Nearly May Day

Three workmen with blue pails

Brown coal

Safe period

Big barbershop man

The dry well

Heron

One yellow chicken

Sailing to Cuba

Off the West Pier

Winter 1955

Rinsing

To Betty, swimming

In Berber’s Ice Cream Parlour

Not going to the forest

Lutherans

 

FROM
Recovering a Body
(1994)

 

To Virgil

Three Ways of Recovering a Body

Holiday to Lonely

Poem in a Hotel

The Bike Lane

Drink and the Devil

Ahvenanmaa

Rubbing Down the Horse

You came back to life in its sweetness

Heimat

In the Desert Knowing Nothing

Poem on the Obliteration of 100,000 Iraqi Soldiers

The Yellow Sky

Getting the Strap

Adders

The conception

Scan at 8 weeks

Pedalo

Beetroot Soup

The Diving Reflex

Bathing at Balnacarry

Boys on the Top Board

Sylvette Scrubbing

Babes in the Wood

Cajun

Skips

Time by Accurist

The Silent Man in Waterstones

The Wardrobe Mistress

When You’ve Got

 

FROM
Bestiary
(1997)

 

Epigraph

Candle poem

At the Emporium

Next door

He lived next door all his life

The surgeon husband

Fishing beyond sunset

Hare in the snow

Need

Sometimes in the rough garden of city spaces

I should like to be buried in a summer forest

The scattering

All the things you are not yet

Diving girl

A pretty shape

Viking cat in the dark

Baby sleep

Frostbite

Basketball player on Pentecost Monday

Tiger lookout

Tiger Moth caterpillar

Hungry Thames

The wasp

Little Ellie and the timeshare salesman

Bouncing boy

Ghost at noon

Greek beads

Tea at Brandt’s

We are men, not beasts

 

INDEX OF TITLES AND FIRST LINES

 

Copyright

This book includes all the poems which Helen Dunmore wishes to keep in print from her previous Bloodaxe collections
The Apple Fall
(1983),
The Sea Skater
(1986),
The Raw Garden
(1988),
Short Days, Long Nights: New & Selected Poems
(1991),
Recovering a Body
(1994) and
Bestiary
(1997), together with a new collection,
Out of the Blue
(2001), and a selection of poems for children previously published in
Secrets
(Bodley Head, 1994).

Acknowledgements are due to the editors of the following
publications
in which some of the previously uncollected poems in the
Out of the Blue
section first appeared:
The Guardian, The Independent, Poetry Review, The Printer’s Devil, Proof, Wading through the Deep Water
(Coychurch Press, 2000). ‘Jacob’s Drum’ and ‘Mr Lear’s Ring’ were first broadcast on
Poetry Proms
on BBC Radio 3. ‘Ice Coming’ was commissioned for the Salisbury Festival. ‘Piers Plowman: The Crucifixion and Harrowing of Hell’ was commissioned and broadcast by BBC Radio 3.

Speak to me in the only language

I understand, help me to see

as you saw the enemy plane

pounce on you out of the sun:

one flash, cockling metal. Done.

Done for, they said, as he spun earthward

to the broad chalk bosom of England.

Done for and done
.

You are the pilot of this poem,

you speaks its language, thumbs-up

to the tall dome of June.

Even when you long to bail out

you’ll stay with the crate.

Done for, they said, as his leather jacket

whipped through the branches.

Done for and done
.

Where are we going and why so happy?

We ride the sky and the blue,

we are thumbs up, both of us

even though you are the owner

of that long-gone morning,

and I only write the poem.

You own that long-gone morning.

Solo, the machine-gun stitched you.

One flash did for you.

Your boots hit the ground

ploughing a fresh white scar in the downland.

They knew before they got to him,

from the way he was lying

done for, undone
.

But where are we going?

You come to me out of the blue

strolling the springy downland

done for, thumbs up, oil on your hands.

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