Authors: Simon Armitage
THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF
Copyright © 2010 by Simon Armitage
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada, Limited, Toronto.
Originally published in Great Britain by Faber and Faber in 2010.
Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Armitage, Simon, 1963–
Seeing stars : poems / by Simon Armitage.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-59943-8
I. Title.
PR
6051
R
564
S
44 2011
821’.914—dc22 2010052918
Front-of-jacket photograph © William Wegman Jacket design by Carol Devine Carson
v3.1
For Sue
Back in the Early Days of the Twenty-first Century
I’ll Be There to Love and Comfort You
Upon Opening the Chest Freezer
Sold to the Lady in the Sunglasses and Green Shoes
I am a sperm whale. I carry up to 2.5 tonnes of an oil-like
balm in my huge, coffin-shaped head. I have a brain the
size of a basketball, and on that basis alone am entitled to
my opinions. I am a sperm whale. When I breathe in, the
fluid in my head cools to a dense wax and I nosedive into
the depths. My song, available on audiocassette and
compact disc is a comfort to divorcees, astrologists and
those who have “pitched the quavering canvas tent of their
thoughts on the rim of the dark crater.” The oil in my head
is of huge commercial value and has been used by NASA,
for even in the galactic emptiness of deep space it does not
freeze. I am attracted to the policies of the Green Party
on
paper
but once inside the voting booth my hand is guided
by an unseen force. Sometimes I vomit large chunks of
ambergris. My brother, Jeff, owns a camping and outdoor
clothing shop in the Lake District and is a recreational user
of cannabis. Customers who bought books about me also
bought
Do Whales Have Belly Buttons?
by Melvin Berger
and street maps of Cardiff. In many ways I have
seen it all.
I keep no pets. Lying motionless on the surface I am said
to be “logging,” and “lobtailing” when I turn and offer my
great slow fluke to the horizon. Don’t be taken in by the
dolphins and their winning smiles, they are the pickpockets
of the ocean, the gypsy children of the open waters and
they are laughing all the way to Atlantis. On the basis of
“finders keepers” I believe the Elgin Marbles should
remain the property of the British Crown. I am my own
God—why shouldn’t I be? The first people to open me up
thought my head was full of sperm, but they were men, and
had lived without women for many weeks, and were far
from home. Stuff comes blurting out.
—— and I both agreed that something had to change,
but I was still stunned and not a little hurt when I
staggered home one evening to find she’d draped a
net curtain slap bang down the middle of our home.
She said, “I’m over here and you’re over there, and
from now on that’s how it’s going to be.” It was a
small house, not much more than a single room,
which made for one or two practical problems.
Like the fridge was on my side and the oven was on
hers. And she had the bed while I slept fully
clothed in the inflatable chair. Also there was a
Hüsker Dü CD on her half of the border which I
wouldn’t have minded hearing again for old times’
sake, and her winter coat stayed hanging on the
door in my domain. But the net was the net, and we
didn’t so much as pass a single word through its
sacred veil, let alone send a hand crawling beneath
it, or, God forbid, yank it aside and go marching
across the line. Some nights she’d bring men back,
deadbeats, incompatible, not fit to kiss the heel of
her shoe. But it couldn’t have been easy for her
either, watching me mooch about like a ghost,
seeing me crashing around in the empty bottles and
cans. And there were good times too, sitting side by
side on the old settee, the curtain between us, the
TV in her sector but angled towards me, taking me
into account.
Over the years the moths moved in, got a taste for
the net, so it came to resemble a giant web, like a
thing made of actual holes strung together by fine,
nervous threads. But there it remained, and remains
to this day, this tattered shroud, this ravaged lace
suspended between our lives, keeping us
inseparable and betrothed.
When James Cameron was a young man, this happened
to him. After his eighteenth birthday party had come to
an end and the guests had disappeared wearing colourful
hats and clutching cubes of Battenberg cake wrapped in
paper napkins, James’s mother sat him down at the
breakfast bar. The smell of snuffed candles and
discharged party poppers floated in the air. “James, I’m
not your mother,” she told him. “What?” he managed to
croak. “I work for the government and my contract
comes to an end today.” “Does dad know?” asked the
bewildered James. “He’s not your father. Don’t be cross
with us, we’re only doing our job.” James felt like a gold
tooth sent flying through the air in a fist fight. “What
about my brother, Peter, and all the family?” “Actors,”
she said, very matter-of-factly. “I don’t believe you. Not
auntie Madge.” “Especially her. She went to drama
school. She was always a tad Shakespearian for my taste
but some people like that approach.” The small tear in
James’s eye, like a baby snail, finally emerged from its
shell. “Will you leave me?” he asked. She said, “There’s
a taxi coming in half an hour. I’ve left a chilli con carne
in the fridge and there’s a stack of pizzas in the freezer.
Pepperoni—the ones you like. We’re opening a bed and
breakfast place on the east coast. Actually it’s a safe-
house for political prisoners—I can tell you that because
I know you won’t repeat it.” Suddenly she looked like the
meanest woman who ever lived, though of course he
loved her very being.
James went outside. His best friend, Snoobie, and Carla,
his girlfriend, were leaning on the wall with suitcases in
their hands. Carla was wearing sunglasses and passing a
piece of chewing gum from one side of her mouth to the
other. “Not you two as well?” said James, despairingly.
“ ’Fraid so,” said Snoobie. “Anyway, take care. I’ve been
offered a small part in a play at the Palace Theatre in
Watford and there’s a read through tomorrow morning.
She’s off to Los Angeles, aren’t you, Carla?” “Hollywood,”
she said, still chewing the gum. James said, “Didn’t it mean
anything, Carla? Not even that time behind the taxi rank
after the Microdisney concert?” “Dunno,” she shrugged. “I’d
have to check the file.” James could have punched a hole in
her chest and ripped out the poisonous blowfish of her heart.
He walked heavily up to the paddock. If he’d been a smoker
who’d quit, now would have been the time to start again. If
he’d been carrying a loaded firearm in his pocket he might
have put that to his lips as well. Then a bird fell out of the
sky and landed just a yard or so from his feet. A cuckoo.
It flapped a few times and died. However tormented or
shabby you’re feeling, however low your spirits, thought
James, there’s always someone worse off. His mother had
taught him that. It was then he noticed the tiny electric
motor inside the bird’s belly, and the wires under its wings,
and the broken spring sticking out of its mouth.
Back in the early days of the twenty-first century I was
working as a balloon seller on the baked and crumbling
streets of downtown Mumbai. It was lowly work for a
man like me with a sensitive nature and visionary dreams,
but at least I wasn’t moping around like a zombie,
tapping the windows of taxis and limousines with a
broken fingernail, begging for biscuits and change.
Besides which, these were no ordinary inflatables, but
gargantuan things, like gentle, alien beings. To drum up
business I’d fill one with air and slap the flat of my hand
on the quivering skin, the sound booming out among
passing tourists, reverberating through body and soul.
It was a sticky and slow Thursday in March when he
crossed the road towards me, that man in his seersucker
suit, and chose a purple balloon from the bag, lifted it
with his little finger like evidence found at the scene of
some filthy crime, and said, “How much for this?” We
haggled and he bargained hard, drove me down to my
lowest price, which was two rupees, then he said, “OK,
but I want it blowing up.” “No, sir,” I said, “that price
is without air.” “Blowing up, buddy, right to the top, or
I’m walking away,” said the man in the seersucker suit.
Trade had been slack that day. In fact in ten sun-
strangled hours this was my only nibble, and to walk
home with empty pockets is to follow the hearse, so they
say. So I exhaled at great length, breathed the air of
existence into that purple blimp, and to this day I wish I
had not. For with that breath my soul was sold, and all
for the price of a cup of betel nuts or a lighted candle
placed in the lap of the elephant god.
And his lazy daughter danced with me once and left me
to slouch and gag in the stinking womb of my own stale
breath. Then his fat boy bundled me straight to his room,
and when I wouldn’t yield to his two-fisted punches and
flying bicycle kicks, all the spite of puberty coursed
through the veins in his neck, and the light in his eye
shrank to a white-hot, pin-sharp, diamond-tipped point.