Read Hold Your Own Online

Authors: Kate Tempest

Hold Your Own (3 page)

The cruelty of the sun that burns above

And you offer only toothless grins

For all that you have seen.

 

Tiresias, you hold your own.

Each you that you have been.

 

You walk among us, slow,

A ragged crow,

With breath to blow,

In which we’ll see a truth

That we’ll wish we didn’t know.

 

You’re the crazy on the corner

Old, and smelling weird

Queuing for electric

With birdbones in your beard.

 

You stagger on regardless,

Swaying in the street

Summoning an oracle

That can’t be arsed to meet.

 

While we assemble selves online

And stare into our phones,

You are bright and terrifying,

Breath and flesh and bone.

 

Tiresias – you teach us

What it means: to hold your own.

Childhood

 

 

 

T
IRESIAS
: You long for knowledge;

                  you will soon long for ignorance.

 

– Euripides,
The Phoenician Women

For my niece

I hold you in my arms,

your age is told in months.

 

There’s things I hope you’ll learn.

Things I’m sure that I learned once.

 

But there’s nothing I can teach you.

You’ll find all that you need.

 

No flower bends its head to offer

teaching to a seed.

 

The seed will grow and blossom

once the flower’s ground to dust.

 

But even so, if nothing else,

one thing I’ll entrust:

 

Doing what you please

is not the same

 

as doing what you must.

I was so much older then,

I’m younger than that now

It roars. Precious and hot and before time.

We played games on the alleyway railing.

I was the fat one. Good-natured and kind.

They were my friends. The world was our plaything.

 

We climbed hills to bury things. We drew maps.

Pulled our feet from the suck of the Quaggy.

Rules were if you flinched they got two free slaps.

My specs were large and my clothes were baggy.

 

Collected things that we found on the ground.

Always the goalie. I never complained.

I told the stories; they did the sounds.

We painted potatoes whenever it rained.

Snakes in the grass

I was walking my dog in the park.

He ran down to the wooded bit where I wasn’t allowed on my own

and I followed him, calling.

 

I was a kind-hearted child. I’d run across the road to save a spider.

I glimpsed the top of his tail and clapped my hands.

I found him!

 

He was sniffing another dog.

The other dog was sat beside a couple lying down.

They didn’t have their clothes on.

 

I dropped to my haunches to talk about dogs.

He was above her.

His elbows dug into the grass.

 

She was scowling at me,

her hair was long and sweaty.

They were wrapped in a cream blanket.

 

I stroked their dog.

Asked for his name.

Explained that some of my best friends were animals.

 

He told me to Fuck off.

It was the first time I’d heard it.

He hissed it full of venom and his eyes were black as 8balls.

Girl next door

I was seven,

my neighbour was eight.

She stuffed a pair of socks down my pants

and straddled me and called me big boy.

 

I didn’t have a clue what it meant

but I’ve been dizzy on that feeling ever since.

Thirteen

The boys have football and skate ramps.

They can ride BMX

and play basketball in the courts by the flats until midnight.

The girls have shame.

 

One day,

when we are grown and we have minds of our own,

we will be kind women, with nice smiles and families and jobs.

And we will sit,

with the weight of our lives and our pain

pushing our bodies down into the bus seats,

and we will see thirteen-year-old girls for what will seem like the first

time since we’ve been them,

and they will be sitting in front of us, laughing

into their hands at our shoes or our jackets,

and rolling their eyes at each other.

 

While out of the window, in the sunshine,

the boys will be cheering each other on,

and daring each other to jump higher and higher.

Bully

I was sat beside her on the bench.

It was lunchtime and the boys were all playing football.

The girls sat on benches beside the field

and watched the boys.

Every now and then she’d grunt and say things like

cor I wouldn’t mind having him

 

She’d had her period,

she said it was like being sick out your minge.

And she’d been fingered

and she had spots

and she knew swearwords

and she had boobs

and she gave blowjobs.

 

Before I had music and rhyming,

I was too big and I walked like a boy,

and I was too soft for the school that I went to

and I was too smart and it made her suspicious.

I had to be tenderised.

 

In the changing room,

girls sprayed so much Innocence it made the air toxic to breathe,

and brushed each other’s hair

and sang pop songs.

 

The bully would point at my crotch

and ask what I had.

And I wouldn’t understand

but I would blush and blush and blush.

 

Her sidekick was skinny and not very smart

and had hair like a short lampshade

and every time a boy walked past the bully would shout

shut your legs you minger,
I can smell your dirty fanny

and the sidekick would stare at the ground.

Their mothers had been friends since they were at school.

School

We wander into school, happy children;

kind and bright and interested in things.

We don’t yet know the horrors of the building.

The hatred it will teach. The boredom it will bring.

 

Soon we’ll learn to disappear in public.

We’ll learn that getting by is good enough.

We’ll learn the way it feels to see injustice,

and shut our mouths in case it comes for us.

 

We’ll learn to never think but copy blindly.

To ally with the mean and keep them near.

We’ll learn to not be talented or clever,

and the most important lessons

for success in a career:

 

How to follow orders when you’re bordering

on nausea and you’re bored

and insecure and dwarfed by fear.

Sixteen

They think we’re bad kids.

We have nothing but fury and bass

and dead friends that keep us close to each other.

We’re tied to our fate like it’s mythical.

But nothing is certain.

 

I’m a talented thief.

I push trolley loads of fancy booze out the doors of Tesco’s

with a smiling nonchalance that makes me famous.

 

My family are worried.

Me and my dad are fighting with our hands.

My sisters can’t reach me.

I’ve stopped coming home at night.

I’ve dropped out of school to sit around and laugh at people.

 

Waiting in the pool room for the Triad with the coke,

walking through the rain with a bar of hash strapped to my chest,

I feel like punching every stranger in the face.

My friends pass me the laughing gas.

When other kids throw parties, they hope that we won’t come.

 

When I meet her, she is just like me.

 

I wake before her and start drinking.

She sees me at the foot of her bed,

smoking skunk out of her window,

watching all the chaos come to life below us.

And she whispers things I’ve never heard a person say.

 

When we walk down the street holding hands

grown men stuff theirs down their jeans and stare openly.

Groups of boys follow us to ask her why she’s with me.

When we stand kissing at a party,

a man we’ve never met

grips the back of both our heads

and sticks his tongue into our mouths.

 

When the rumours start

I don’t believe them.

 

Before her there were things that I trusted.

But now there is a loneliness so deep it sends me foetal.

And dark endless raves where she makes us both a spectacle

and all I want are the friends I’ve lost,

the certainty of knowing I have nothing.

The cypher

A circle. Shoulders and hard chests and arms like rosary beads

from push-ups before bed, eyes narrowed.

We wear our hoods up. We talk in couplets.

Two lines at a time and my heart has

never been calmer than here,

in the cypher.

 

I stare at my trainers and listen to deep voices

throwing out lyrics through smoke.

I know I can do this much better than them.

I can feel it. Something like stillness,

but nothing like stillness.

 

It creeps up my throat like water creeps down it.

It spreads itself over my tongue.

My shoulders are squared.

I move like the boys,

I talk like the boys,

but my words are my own.

 

And when I unleash them, my eyes widen and focus.

The streetlights stop flickering, just for a moment,

the arrogance prickles like sweat at my temples,

I’m moving as if I have never been gentle.

The kinder among them look at me sideways.

Smiling, shaking their heads,

I feel it all through me.

It’s shaking my legs.

 

I push my fist against theirs, my soft arms are clasped,

I’m embraced like a man, my back slapped,

and my heart all the time getting faster.

The beatboxer nods his respect
.

And I’m feeling bigger than

all of these buildings.

I wait for my turn again,

everything burning.

Age is a pervert. Youth is a fascist

Youth hates age, age loves youth.

This means we are born for unhappiness.

This means we will keep buying outfits.

 

Youth, in his hard-bodied, glistening bullshit

stares at the sagging mouths of his elders

and feels utter disgust and it makes him annoyed.

 

Why aren’t they ashamed of themselves?

His youth is his victory, he wins every day that he’s young.

He beats people up when he’s bored.

He sniffs cheap drugs and plays with his balls in the classroom.

He can’t stand ugly people.

 

When he steps out onto the street,

everyone is speaking his language.

He feels like the first to have ever done anything.

 

Age stares with dismay at Youth.

He’d shared that same air once

but now, he stands alone on the high street,

his glasses steamed up,

pulling his saggy pants out of his arsecrack.

When he thinks back, his entire life is movie stills.

 

He watches the arrogant arc of that young skull,

the swing of those young limbs and feels his guts drop.

 

If he could hold something young

just for a few good strokes

The boy Tiresias

Watch him, kicking a tennis ball,

keeping it up,

the boy on the street in his sister’s old jumper.

Watch him,

absorbed in the things that he does.

Crouched down,

observing the worms and the slugs.

 

He’s shaping their journeys

placing his leaves in their paths,

playing with fate.

Godcub.

Sucking on sherbet.

Riding his bike in the sunlight.

Filmic.

Perfect.

 

But one day

he’ll be hunch-backed, riddled with pain.

Desperate for love but too weak to enjoy it.

Mumbling at strangers on trains,
how strange

that when we have youth we’re so keen to destroy it.

 

We do not choose

but follow blindly.

We do not own

just sometimes carry.

We do not make.

We undertake

to be more alive

each day we wake.

 

And this is a must.

And the days are all dust

and the only thing worse

than losing the trust

of a lover is finding the rust

in their kiss.

 

He will live longer than all of his passions.

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