The Months
By Susan Wicks
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About this ebook
The Months is a book of poems about time – not only the attritions of time, its ageings, conflicts and illnesses, but also, and more importantly, the kind of time the French philosopher Bergson called ‘duration’, a human time that speeds up or slows, expands and contracts, measured by perceptual rather than scientific laws.
At the centre of the collection, the long title-poem interweaves material from two pregnancies spanning two generations: these months open themselves up to insecurities and dreams, culture, myths, everyday realities and moments of fear or delight. The two births that end this compelling narrative take the book in a new direction, to a time and place where it is possible to stand still and watch a saucepan drying on a draining-board or cycle round a mountainous island at age sixty, laugh at oneself, or even begin again.
‘Wicks can be both a fearless and arrestingly tender kind of writer, unafraid of taking a thought into uncomfortable, raw or unexpected places… confessions and punishments, banishments and betrayals, all are rendered in the mouths of the past or looked at from the aftermath of the present. Seeming to rise darkly in pitch at the end of the collection, they adjust our sense of the easier poems, and further deepen the focus of this mysterious and powerful book.’ – Paul Farley, PBS Bulletin, on House of Tongues
Susan Wicks
Susan Wicks grew up in Kent, but has lived in France, Ireland and the US. She is the author of two previous novels, a short memoir, six collections of poetry and a book of stories. Cold Spring in Winter, her translation of the French poet Valerie Rouzeau, was shortlisted for Canada's international Griffin Prize and won the Scott-Moncrieff Prize for Literary Translation. Her most recent book, House of Tongues, was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. She is married with two adult daughters.
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Book preview
The Months - Susan Wicks
Childhood
I am the attic and the island,
fir tree brushing the window, shipwreck,
whalebones at the tideline washed clean.
I am a mattress of fresh straw,
a hide of interwoven branches
where the stars come in.
I am the hand-turned bowl
with a grain like satin,
filled to the brim with warm froth.
I am cheese and no cheese.
In my salt-stained tatters, hairy as a monkey
gibbering from a deep cave
I call myself Ben Gunn. Or Peter, goat-boy;
Clara at the cliff-edge while her wheelchair
buckets down into the ravine.
Each evening when the mountains turn to flame
I am talking parrot, I am, I am
sixty men on a dead prosthetic limb.
I am buried treasure, undiscovered, homesick
exile in a polished room,
my cache of rolls inedible as bricks.
Somewhere a blind grandmother
lights her driftwood beacon on the beach
ever less often, no longer hoping for my return.
April is the month for cutting up a map with scissors
You cut along the roads, this palimpsest
of tangled lines, your blades excising
country lanes, a thin blue length of river.
Or contour-lines: a landscape’s close-whorled web
could lose its top, become a thumb-shaped hole and never
find itself again. And you will never
find your way back down. You let the scissors wander,
shaving the railway from its shaded bank,
the tracks from their flood plain, a bridge from what flows under,
blocks or pips of churches from their cross.
You join the dotted footprints of a path
with one clean slit, so the path itself’s erased, and all that’s left
is a line between two fields, and you can never
go that way again. You sever wood
from orchard, orchard from reed-clumped marsh; manoeuvre
deftly in and out along the fretted coast,
trimming land from water – high tide now or low?
You’ll never know. The map
falls from your fingers in green shreds, a new high water
drowns the coastal strip, begins to lap
the land and grass is pushing up
through paper, flocks of exotic scraps alight and flutter
round your feet, jade-green as sea or parkland, curling,
blown off-course, like feathers.
Bike-path
It could take the best part of your life
to find a path like this
protected from the public thoroughfare by rocks,
meandering along between old trees
beside a river, skirting warehouses,
over a plank bridge.
Sometimes you almost gave up
and stopped to read the map,
tracing your route from fold
to fraying fold – not these wheel-trap surfaces
broken and scored by ice
as if some beast had dragged its claws across.
But now you keep on going till it joins a street
of condos, little kids on bikes,
and suddenly it’s hard to keep your face straight
as this small boy explains
the signage of the three-way intersection
and what it means.
This is the scenic way: all sense of where you were
is lost. Though in fact it’s not that far
from anywhere. And look,
you got to see those birds,
these greening leaves, this butterfly that flutters up
like blackened paper to your handlebars.
Where
Where do geese go when they fly north
too soon? This morning in the lane
they straggled overhead, a wishbone skein
of ten or fifteen. Already from the south
I heard them weeks ago
creaking above me through the air at dusk –
and then the cold. Eighteen below,
each pond a cataract of ice. Where did they go?
You laughed. The birds weren’t stupid,
surely they’d just turn round
and head back south, searching for softer ground
where the grasses weren’t starved white,
where shoots poke through the moss,