Authors: Fleur Adcock
BEFORE
She'll never be able to play the piano â
well, not properly. She'll never be able
to play the recorder, even, at school,
when she goes: it has so many little holesâ¦Â
We'll have her taught the violin.
Lucky her left hand's the one with four
fingers, one for each string. A thumb
and a fleshy fork are enough to hold a bow.Â
Before the calculator â the electronic one â
there were beads to count on; there was the abacus
to tell a tally or compute a score;
or there were your fingers, if you had enough.Â
The base was decimal: there had to be
a total of ten digits, in two sets â
a bunch of five, another bunch of five.
If they didn't match, your computations went haywire.Â
On the left hand, four | and a thumb. |
On the right, a thumb | and just two. |
Proper fingers, true, | fitted out |
in the standard way; | but not four. |
 |  |
Baby-plump, the wrist | on the left. |
On the right, the arm | narrows down |
to a slender stem | and a palm |
like a little tube | of soft bones. |
Leafy lanes and
rus in urbe
were the thing
for a sheltered childhood (not that it was for long,
but parents try): the elm trees lingering
behind the coach factory; the tense monotonous songÂ
of collared doves; the acres of bare floor
for learning to gallop on in the first size
of Start-Rite shoes; the peacock glass in the front door;
and the swift refocusing lurch of the new baby-sitter's eyes.Â
The Duke of Edinburgh stance: how cute
in a five-year-old! She doesn't do it much
when you're behind her; then it's hands in armpits
or pockets. School, of course, would like to teachÂ
that well-adjusted children don't need pockets
except for their normal purposes, to hold
hankies or bus-tickets. She'll not quite learn
what she's not quite specifically taught.Â
I didn't exist till I thought that;
then God invented me and made me
the age I am now (nearly eight);Â
perhaps I was someone else before,
and he suddenly swapped us round, and said
âYou can be the girl with two fingers
and she can be you for a change, instead.'Â
âGive us your hand â it's a bit muddy here,
you'll slip.' But he's on her wrong side: her right's
wrong. She tries to circumnavigate him
(âWatch it!' he says), to offer him her left â
and slips. It comes out. âThere!' she says. âYou see!'
âIs that all? Fucking hell,' he says, âthat's nothing;
don't worry about it, love. My Auntie May
lost a whole arm in a crash. Is it hereditary?'Â
âSome tiny bud that should have split into four
didn't, we don't know why' was all they could offer.
Research, as usual, lags. But suddenly, this:
âA long-term study has found a positive linkÂ
between birth defects and exposure to pesticides
in the first twelve weeks of pregnancyâ¦the baby's
neural crestâ¦mothers who had been present when
aerosol insecticidesâ¦' Now they tell us.Â
TRAVELLING
She has not got multiple sclerosis.
She has not got motorneuron disease,
or muscular dystrophy, or Down's Syndrome,
or a cleft palate, or a hole in the heart.Â
Her sight and hearing seem to be sound.
She has not been damaged by malnutrition,
or tuberculosis, or diabetes.
She has not got (probably not got) cancer.Â
Date of birth and all that stuff: straightforward;
likewise, now that she's stopped growing, height.
But ah, âDistinguishing marks': how can she smuggle
so glaring a distinction out of sight?Â
The Passport Office proves, in one of its human
incarnations, capable of tact:
a form of words emerges that fades down
her rare statistic to a lustreless fact.
She's seeing stars â Orion steady on her left
like a lit-up kite (she has a window-seat),
and her whole small frame of sky strung out
with Christmas-tree lights. But what's all thatÂ
behind them? Spilt sugar? Spangled faults
in the plane's window? A dust of glittering points
like the sparkle-stuff her mother wouldn't let her
wear on her eyes to the third-form party.Â
Does less mean more? She's felt more nearly naked
in duffel-coat and boots and scarf
with nothing showing but a face and her bare
fingers (except, of course, for the timesÂ
in fur gloves â mittens â look, no hands!)
than here on a beach in a bikini:
flesh all over. Look at my legs, my
back, my front. Shall I take off my top?Â
Shoulders like horses' bums; an upper arm
dressed in a wobbling watermelon of flesh
and a frilly muu-muu sleeve; red puckered necks
above the bougainvillaea and sunsetsÂ
and straining buttons of Hawaiian shirts;
bellies, bald heads, a wilting grey moustache
beneath a hat proclaiming âOne Old Poop'.
The tour guide rounds them up: his travelling freak-show.Â
âThere will be twenty telescopes in the crater
of Mount Albert.' White-coated figures man them,
marshalling queues in darkness: not the Klan
but the Lions raising funds for charity.
$2 a look. No lights â not even torches;
no smoking (bad for the optics); no moon
above the tree-fringed walls of this grassy dip.
Nothing up there but stars. And it, of course.Â
A glow-worm in a Marmite jar
like the one her mother brought her once:
âI dreamt you woke me in the night and showed me
a glow-worm in a Marmite jar.'Â
So these wee kids in dressing-gowns
will remember being woken up
for honey sandwiches and cocoa
and a little light in a ring of glass.Â
âIt's not like anything else, with its stumpy tail:
just a fuzz, really, until you get up close â
but of course you can't. With binoculars, I meant,
or a telescope. Actually the tail's fading.'Â
Higher than Scorpius now, higher than the Pointers,
high as the mid-heaven, she's tracked it nightly,
changing. âI'm not the only one, but I'm once
in a lifetime.' As for close, that's something else.Â
AFTER
Landing at Gatwick on a grey Sunday when
the baggage handlers seem to be on strike as
they were at the airport before last (but no,
it's merely Britain being its old self ) she'sÂ
her old self â a self consisting also of
more hand-luggage than she'd thought she was allowed
plus her at last reclaimed suitcase: all of which,
however she may dispose them, hurt her hand.
Rise above it! Swallow a chemical:
chuck down whisky, Valium, speed,
Mogadon, caffeine; bomb it or drown it.
But wait! If chemicals did the deedÂ
pandering to their ways compounds
the offence. Resist: you know they lead
to trouble. Find another obsession.
Face a healthier form of need.Â
Saving the world is the only valid cause.
Now that she knows it's round it seems smaller,
more vulnerable (as well as bigger, looser,
a baggy bundle of dangerous contradictions).Â
There's room for such concerns in student life,
if you stretch it. So: Link hands around the world
for peace! Thumbs down to Star Wars! Hands off
the environment! Two fingers to the Bomb!Â
âOf course you'd have a natural sympathyâ¦
I always thought it was quite sweet, your little hand,
when we were kids; but we don't want other kids
walking around the world with worse thingsâ¦Â
I'm not upsetting you, am I?' No, she's not,
this warm voice from the past, this candid face.
âRight. See you tomorrow. The coach leaves at 8.
Oh, and we've got a wonderful furious banner.'Â
The fountain in her heart informs her
she needn't try to sleep tonight â
rush, gush: the sleep-extinguisher
frothing in her chest like a dishwasher.
She sits at the window with a blanket
to track the turning stars. A comet
might add some point. The moon ignores her;
but dawn may come. She'd settle for that.Â
There was a young woman who fell
for someone she knew rather well â
a friend from her school: confirming the rule
that with these things you never can tell.Â
The person she'd thought a fixed star â
stuck on rails like a tram, not a car â
shot off into orbit and seemed a new planet,
and a dazzler, the finest by far.Â
She wants to see what it looks like on
a breast. She puts it on a breast â
not the one she has in mind
but her own: at least it's a rehearsal.Â
Three weeks later, the first night:
a nipple, darker than hers, framed
in a silky, jointed bifurcation.
There is also dialogue. And applause.Â
And she never did learn to play the violin.
So it will have to be
Musica Mundana
,
âthe harmony of the spheres' (coming across a map
of the southern skies cut out of some Auckland paper)Â
or the other kind: what was it?
Instrumentalis
and â ah, yes â
Humana
. (Listen: Canopus, Crux,
Carina, Libra, Vela choiring together. She
has glided right off the edge of the star-chart.)
( 1 9 9 7 )
That’s where they lived in the 1890s.
They don’t know that we know,
or that we’re standing here, in possession
of some really quite intimate information
about the causes of their deaths,
photographing each other in a brisk wind
outside their terrace house, both smiling
(not callously, we could assure them),
our hair streaming across our faces
and the green plastic Marks and Spencer’s bag
in which I wrapped my camera against showers
ballooning out like a wind-sock
from my wrist, showing the direction
of something that’s blowing down our century.
(Sam Adcock, 1876-1956, & Eva Eggington, 1875-1970)
What shall we do with Grandpa, in his silver
frame? And why is he in it, may we ask?
Why not Grandma, still shyly veiled in her
tissue paper and photographer’s cardboard?
Of course, there’s his moustache: we can’t miss that;
nor would he wish us to. It must have taken
hours and all his barbering skills to wax
and twirl the ends into these solemn curlicues.
We can’t keep that in a drawer – or he couldn’t.
But Grandma, now, in her black, nervously smiling,
one hand barely poised on the same ridiculous
Empire chairback: what a stunner she was!
Why did he not frame her? After all, her looks
are what he married her for. He fell in love
with her portrait (not this one) in a photographer’s
window, and hunted down the woman herself.
She was a dressmaker’s cutter (cool hands);
he was an extrovert – a talker, mixer
(the Lodge, the Church, the Mechanics’ Institute,
the Temperance Movement). And it all came true:
seven years of engagement, fifty more
together. You can almost map their marriage,
decade by decade, through the evolution,
flourishing and decline of his moustache.
At twenty, not a whisker; at thirty or so,
this elaborate facial construct. In Manchester
it throve; then what did he do but export it
to droop and sag in the bush at Te Raua Moa,
on his dairy farm (how those cattle depressed him –
was New Zealand not such a bright idea after all?).
But it perked up for his passport in the 30s,
with a devilish Vandyke beard, for their last trip Home.
Not a handsome man, he must have decided
to take a bit of trouble and pass for one;
while Grandma, with the eyes and the bone structure
and that tilt of the head, decided to be plain.
She took to bobbed hair and wire-framed glasses,
and went grey early. He never did (unless
there was some preparation he knew about?)
Here they are in a 50s Polyfoto –
she with her shy smile, he with a muted version
of the moustache, wearing his cameo tie-pin
and a jubilant grin, as if he’d just slammed down
the winning trick in his favourite game of ‘Sorry!’