Clemency at White Lodge

THE SUMMER-HOUSE BURIED BY SNOW

There were girls asleep on the beds, upstairs and down.

I was living in the dreams of Paul Delvaux.

When they woke up, it was slowly, slowly, and then

One hit another on the head for wanting to throw

A party.  “I’m the one who does that,” she said.

When I went to Chinatown with Clemency

It was like going down the escalator next to a Botticelli.

That pallor – the girl was a manner of being,

Didn’t eat meat though, suffered from migraine,

Unlike the one like the wild honey on Capri

Who drove a Cortina and took me to dinner.

Later she lay on her stomach, a pillow beneath her,

While out on the court, a girl with the loveliest legs

(Clad in my turquoise running shorts)

Tossed up the ball to serve an ace.

Girls wrapped in towels, glimpsed on stairs,

Humming beneath their thick white turbans,

Girls in gym-slips, wedded to trapezes,

And tall African girls loping down corridors,

The flashing of their soles persisting

After their bodies have merged with the shadows.

Crinolines rustle and skirts with many sashes

Bob together in private like whispering bells,

Fans with ivory spines bicker in parlours,

But still the one in the boots tramps on down freezing streets.

She needs no applause.  It doesn’t matter to her

What people think, and she is quite indifferent to the fact

That she smells of gardens, nuts in May, the creaminess of spring.

LOSSES

That crystal goblet – it had stood on my mother’s bedroom

Chest-of-drawers for ever, as Brigid had, her wooden cow

Kept since she was a child, head chewed by a dog though,

Body daubed with big red spots; gone, as have the Arnesby Browns:

The small one of the windmill, last seen in a storm across a field

Of corn, the larger one of cows in a sun-fumed pasture.

Gone, gone, as have the zoological volumes, ages old,

Illustrated with wood-cuts, the Senna kilim taken from my

Flat in Islington, the cricket bat with autographs of Hobbs and

The rest of the team, given me by Uncle Paul, who must

Have gone up and asked for them at the end of some long

Afternoon at Lords. Gone, along with his father’s Sandhurst

Sword of honour. Stolen, lost, or simply forgotten.

Absences that lose me sleep, as does that magnificent oak

Felled by some farmer who begrudged the shade it cast on his crop.

Not the death of my father, since that is simply an idea:

He had been killed before I was born, so never someone

Missed the way I missed my intellectual cousin Jean,

Found collapsed on the floor of her flat, and Clemency

Who stole my heart without intending it. She phoned me up

Years later, after I was married, then committed suicide,

As Nick did, as did Graham; and my tiny daughter Storm

Who crawled away delighted by my chasing her and then was gone,

Gone like the ball I watched at four float away down the Hudson.

To the memory of Clemency Clift, a wonderful dancer with the Royal Ballet back in the sixties. I was very much in love with her.

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World War 1 – Charles Fouqueray – artist

I just acquired 9 wonderful prints by Charles Fouqueray – a war artist I had never heard of.

Charles Dominique Fouqueray (Le Mans, 23 April 1869 – 28 March 1956) was a French painter. He studied at the École des Beaux Arts in Paris under Alexandre Cabanel and Fernand Cormon. From 1908 he was Peintre de la Marine, following the career of his father, a naval officer. He was recipient of the 1909 Prix Rosa Bonheur, then in 1914 the first Prix de l’Indochine.

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Autumn

AUTUMN, a fragment of a diary in verse, has just been re-issued as a Grey Suit Heyzine edition

See also this list of all books presented in this format

CHAINLINK gave Autumn an excellent review, and did an interview with me – which has inspired me to present this work here, so that it can be read.

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THEOSIS

Uber delivers you your order from MacDonalds.

Now you can relax and watch the game;

A pop trash white who has somehow risen to the top.

x

As monarch now you might be constitutional

But you’re not. Turns out you can do whatever you like.

Where previous dictators offered bread and circuses

x

You snatch the heads of other heads of state.

The strategy distracts from your fondlings of pretty things

Who were permitted to touch your dick with gloves on

x

Because staying clean afforded insulation from sin

While you turned into a god. Anyhow, that was a long time ago.

Just urine under the bridge, as it were.

x

These days, there is no international law.

Time may well fold inward,

Because you cannot drown the sun or not for long.

x

But at a stroke, your time has come.

And you are clearly one of our vicious new barbarians

Squatting on the pile below, taking a shit

x

When you feel like it, soiling your own throne.

How to turn your shit into explosive?

Anger feels more urgent than forgiveness.

x

So advertise some anger, gladly in cahoots

With all the other puppeteers: uber-wealthy engineers

Of abductions, massacres, assassinations,

x

Lab-created plagues. Trash white with cash,

You may have been, but now you’re more inclined

To care about your own genetic line:

x

Barbarian, re-branded as elite. In the eyes of its mother after all,

A cockroach is a gazelle. Thus there’s a wing

Of the White House demolished to accommodate your balls

x

Where courtly curtseys elevate a tacky gilt aplomb.

Trash whites today are scum to be dumped with the trash.

Ordinary mortals? Ants, to be sprayed with Glyphosate.

x

We are mere pests to be rid of – abroad or at home.

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My Father and his Motorbike with its Side-car

WILDERNESS ROAD

x

While seagulls fight for lamp‑posts near the timber stores,

Inside the drawer, his folded airmail fades.

Behind those bricked-up windows, boarded doors,

His motor-bike once led your small parades.

x

You lost its little rider where the viaduct

Is just a name before some heavy plant.

What relics of his life comprise his dialect

Who wore his khaki envelope aslant?

x

That ancient biscuit tin was once a zoetrope

Which held the eyes of children to its whirl.

Its cogging wheel is rusted now, and cannot hope

To crank again the motions of his girl,

x

And in that jungle cutting by the railway tracks

A picture postcard curls among protectives.

There, behind the hoardings, where they drop their slacks,

The Bay of Naples tenders its perspectives.

x

His profile is the King’s, who never comes

To your place, though you know him by the coin

You find beneath the boards, among the crumbs,

And then you wonder will he come again?

x

There was a time you lived in rented rooms

And trundled caged-in balls across the floor.

When boys get sent to bed the lids of tombs

May open and their fathers re-appear.

x

He gave his epaulets to you in sleep,

And left the horse that gallops on the shelf.

Of rented rooms, there’s little but a heap

Of rubble, weed and cinder ‑ and yourself.

x

They flatten homes in order to provide

Sufficient job stability for marriage.

Her wartime hooves went flashing down the road.

She hoped that it would cause her a miscarriage.

x

Round the shed where one can hire a helicoil,

Some engineers have cleared another site.

The twanging of a line against a metal pole

Continues madly, far into the night.

x

Against an intercity‑shaken fence,

Forsaken ghosts may rip themselves to tatters.

His army knife will not be carried hence

While Morning Glory steals across these matters.

From Shorter Poems 1969-2022

My father returned from internment in Australia and immediately trained as an engineering officer and joined REME – the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. He married my mother, and was sent out to Naples towards the end of 1944, leaving her pregnant with me. To learn more about their story, read The Best Deborah Stories

He was very proud of his bike with its side-car and travelled on it into Naples from the camp where he was stationed to go to the Scala, having fallen in love with Italian Opera. Bikes with sidecars were notoriously dangerous. In Naples, most officers issued them died on them. My father was no exception. Bear in mind one was riding through traffic in a country one was occupying, so most truck drivers had been enemy combatants until a few months before. My father was squashed between two lorries. I was born a few weeks later. I used to love watching the zoetrope he had made out of a biscuit-tin, especially one animation of a naked girl walking towards one.

More about my father here.

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A Post for New Year’s day 2026! Plus a Review and an Interview…

Great to find this post today in THE HIGH WINDOW.

These are taken from what is now titled my Shorter Poems – which can be read on this Heyzine link.

Other works I have published on Heyzine can be read here

My COLLECTED LONGER POEMS are published by Grey Suit Editions UK

My thanks to David Cooke!

And wow! I can’t complain! Another review out today! This one for AUTUMN, a novel-length poem I published as a Manubook back in 2017. It’s here in CHAINLINK JOURNAL

PLUS, also in this issue, an interview I did with its editor, Neil Fulwood. My thanks to him. What a nice New Year’s day!

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Perfidious Albion

Terrific interview of Harley Schlanger by Garland Nixon.

See also The Geographical Pivot of History

Harley Schlanger is a prominent figure associated with the Schiller Institute, a political and economic think tank founded in 1984. He is known for his updates and newsletters related to the institute’s activities and its connection to the LaRouche movement.

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The Underground Lurches through the Underworld

…You will pay Alan your last respects. The date conflicts

With a meet proposed by a flirt. Two desires are thus at war

And their dispute wrenches you apart, surges like the current

In a battery being charged beneath the ground. Inexorably

The vortex drags you down, down into infernal regions.

Women’s voices there sound instructive but they interrupt each other.

One of them pronounces Manor House ‘Manna House.’

It’s bright for once, the manna scattered, spilling as if it were light;

The fiery pillars blazing overhead as the underground

Lurches through the underworld where all the blackness

Of night in the background shapes itself into grimaces.

It’s Christmas every day down here, or rather Christmas Eve,

And packed with Father Christmases feeling up your bits.

Christmas Eve herself has naked hips. Her nipples spout

Red Bull. The tube becomes her snake, while the Stations

Of the Cross remain closed because of planned engineering work.

However, there are plenty of others at which to disembark,

Their escalators only going down. There is no “up”. You rub

Shoulders with pickpockets, ogle those exquisite girls

Who lend new meaning to ‘untouchable’. The underworld

Is full, all the rush-hours of a life spent commuting

Happening at once. How are you to find your mother here,

Your lost daughter, your love? An ancestor asks you

To join the dead fathers’ brigade. Baron Samedi and his sidekick

Are chopping up pricks to feed to the zombies. They ask for yours,

But you seem to have lost it along with your freedom pass.

Are you already a zombie? The stink of long dead rat

Suggests that you are not. After all, you can still smell it.

One day, one day you will ascend, and, roseate, throw off

The pall to emerge a girl in a choir, utterly above it all

In some pre-Raphaelite shoal. This girl is obviously your soul.

That’s why you needed that bath, back by the snake-infested shore,

For now you are cleansed, and cleaner than you ever were before.

From THE RUNIAD Book 6 – Loki

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Inheritance Tax

The concept of inheritance tax, specifically the vicesima hereditatum, was introduced by the Romans under Emperor Augustus, making them one of the first to implement such a tax. I checked this out because Boadicea complains about it.

…Hence, although, before, some among you may,

Through ignorance of what was best for you, have been deceived

By the perfidious pledges of Rome, yet now that you have tried

Both freedom and servitude, grant me how great a mistake you made

In choosing an imported dictatorship over your ancestral way of life,

For you have now come to realize how much better is poverty

With no master to wealth within the shameful bonds of slavery.

For what treatment is there of the most grievous sort that we

Have not suffered ever since these monsters came to Britain?

Have we not been robbed of most of our property,

And that the most precious, while for what is left we pay taxes,

Besides pasturing and tilling for them all remaining land?

Do we not pay a yearly tribute for our very bodies?

How much better it would be to have been sold to masters

Once and for all, than, while clinging to mere titles of nobility,

To have to ransom ourselves every year! How much better

To have been attacked and finished off than to go about

Weighed down by taxes! And yet, why do I mention death?

For even dying is not free of cost with them; no, you know

What duties we deposit for our dead. Death should be no tythe.

Death frees even those who toil in slavery to others;

Only in the case of these Romans do the very dead remain alive

For their profit…

From The Runiad, book 21 – epic poem completed earlier this year.

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Deborah on Sigurd

Deborah on Sigurd

More than forty years ago!

My mother was a child prodigy as an artist. On one of her paintings my grandmother has written in pencil, “asked for by Sickert”. I am pleased with this painting of her crossing a ploughed field in full hunting kit as I feel I have managed it in my mother’s style.

ANIMAL CRACKERS

Anchored on the stumps of mountains,

Up soars Manhattan, that glittering assemblage;

A giant barge, steel-sided,

Cleaving rivers apart, and yet,

Wherever it can, nature insinuates itself.

Weeds negotiate cracks – even Manhattan

Almost approaches wilderness at

Inwood Hill, perched on its northern tip,

Where pheasants nest, foxes prowl

On slopes once occupied by the Indians.

Off its shore there are forests and wetlands,

Including the ponds of Jamaica Bay,

Breeding baldpates, pintails,

Greater and lesser scaup, skimmers, terns,

Glossy ibises, egrets, and even visited

By the bald eagle. All the same, New Yorkers

Would not know from watching it on the box

Whether a cow was sick or not

As any hillbilly might. To the urbanite,

Farm animals are desirable, with more correspondence

Concerning them than any other perversion.

You see less of animals than people. People

Give you diseases. Animals do not sue

For alimony, nor can they get you pregnant.

Recently my mother visited New York.

She cannot see what she looks directly at,

Yet at seventy-six she managed to get

From Gramercy Park to the Bronx Zoo and back.

Having been a vet, she was more alert

To Fragonard’s cow at the Met

Than handling and stuff like that.

The same was true for Dubuffet’s cow at MoMA.

Seated in the sculpture garden

Next to a Maillol, off to her right

She could see a goat. Picasso’s goat, I said.

Then I headed for the bookshop,

Telling her to stay put.

Back with a cut-price Muybridge,

I caught sight of her straightening up

Behind its metal rump.

Mother had goosed the goat,

Establishing when her kids would drop.

Luckily there were no guards about.

Read my book about my mother – The Best Deborah Stories – here

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