Read The Dog's Leg Page 1




  The Dog’s Leg

  By

  Glyn Essex

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means, including scanning, photocopying, or otherwise without the prior written consent of the copyright owner. © 2015 Glyn Essex

  Table of Contents:

  Any Porch in a Storm

  Before Next Door Wakes Up

  Before the Wall Came Down

  Cousin Alan

  East Berlin, May, 1987

  Forever English

  From the Viewing Platform

  Going for an Indian

  I’m Putting out the Rubbish

  Memento Mori

  My Grandfathers

  On the Railway

  Return of the Native

  Starling Twilight

  The Dog’s Leg

  The Exile

  The Window

  Under New Management

  Career Change

  Any Porch in a Storm

  Those narrow outer doors

  you have to squeeze through

  and the tiny space crammed

  with boots bags

  and a bamboo table

  before you reach

  the real front door

  all very awkward

  deliberately so

  designed to let you know

  this is their barbican

  ditch and palisade

  their Berlin Wall

  Before Next Door Wakes Up

  The sky is clear at last,

  wide-awake,

  and there’s sunshine

  on the roofs of the town.

  It’s warming up

  out there,

  the day pushing on

  determined

  to get things done.

  Soon, the sound of traffic

  will take over

  from birdsong

  and the couple

  in the flat next door

  will not be speaking,

  just banging things about

  as loudly as they can

  but, for now, I’m happy

  more than happy

  with the way things are.

  Before the Wall Came Down

  I never got used to the Wall,

  especially the part the guards called

  “The Area facing the Enemy” –

  anti-tank trench, electric signal fence,

  floodlights and “The Death Strip”,

  six metres wide, sand raked smooth.

  I’d got used to The Party’s slogans everywhere,

  (“My workplace, my battleground for peace”),

  cheap cigarettes which seared my throat,

  the absence of certain things - adverts, litter, dogs -

  and no one about by 10pm.

  But I never got used to the Wall.

  Sometimes on summer evenings

  the sound of heavy metal

  came out of the West like a storm

  and blasted through the border

  as if it wasn’t there,

  leaving no trace on the Death Strip sand.

  Cousin Alan

  He used to invite hawkers in,

  he bellowed at them

  Come on in!

  before they could break into

  their spiel.

  Some of them turned tail

  immediately,

  wondering what was going on

  but most

  stayed for a cup of tea

  and, mission forgotten,

  left with a rosier view

  of their lives.

  East Berlin, May, 1987

  At the checkpoint,

  the guards strut

  and pose like extras

  in a spy film

  and no one laughs.

  Out on the street,

  everything is ordered,

  clean, correct

  and all the hoardings

  preach The Party’s creed.

  A few days in,

  I find I’m missing

  litter, dogshit,

  football hooligans

  and God.

  Forever English

  All that business around class

  seems to have died a death -

  take the way we speak

  long “a” or short? Sofa or settee?

  It really doesn’t matter any more -

  yet sometimes when I meet

  the pukka RP English voice,

  for a moment or two

  I’m back at school

  in a second-hand blazer

  which is far too big

  (“You’ll grow into it”, they said)

  and a cheap flannel shirt

  which makes me itch

  and I might as well be wearing

  a sign around my neck,

  this boy comes

  from the council estate

  From the Viewing Platform

  we could see

  a small park

  in the East

  where children were playing

  just yards

  from the wall.

  For them

  it had always been there,

  a part of the furniture,

  but in a few years’ time

  they’ll be struggling

  to tell you

  exactly where

  it used to be.

  Going for an Indian

  In an emergency, of course,

  I can get a takeaway

  but I’d much rather be

  properly installed like this

  in the scented booths

  of the Balti Palace

  while I wait for my starter.

  As always, I’ve chosen

  the Tarka Dahl,

  acclaimed in the menu

  for its “soupy lentils”.

  I can hear the orders

  shouted out in Bengali

  as the waiters flit in and out

  and the looped music

  so familiar I find myself

  singing along.

  I’m Putting out the Rubbish

  when I hear it.

  Night is falling quickly,

  lights are coming on

  and a bird starts singing

  in next door’s robinia.

  It’s a fluty sort of song,

  plangent, deep.

  I go back inside

  to tell my wife

  I think I’ve been listening to

  a nightingale.

  More likely to be

  a blackbird, she says,

  but I know what you mean.

  Memento Mori

  The pub was crowded,

  bursting with that peculiarly febrile air

  you find sometimes with lunchtime drinking

  but not at the table I was sharing,

  a middle-aged biker on one side

  and an elderly man on the other,

  who was silent apart from the occasional word

  to his dog, a small all-purpose terrier

  with a coat gone bobbly and ragged

  from some kind of skin complaint.

  Suddenly, the biker leaned across me

  and started to talk about

  the town’s new crematorium.

  “Personally,” he said “I like the idea of

  a woodland burial, what about you?”

  “No”, the old man replied,

  “I’ve got a spot for him in the garden.”

  My Grandfathers

  From the little I was told,

  I know that

  one was a charmer

  the other a rogue

  but I’m equally

  proud of them both.


  What I learned from this

  is that it’s possible

  to miss someone

  you’ve never known.

  On the Railway

  I’d like to live in Abbey Street

  where the houses stand fearless

  just yards from the line

  and the trains whoosh through

  the kitchen hall and front door

  the whole caboodle

  carried away with my blessing

  to London or Birmingham

  except for the rails of course

  which stay where they are

  and hum when

  there’s nothing about

  Return of the Native

  I didn’t join the others on deck

  to catch that White Cliffs moment.

  I stayed below in the bar instead,

  not ready yet to jettison

  the feeling of being abroad.

  Now all too soon I’m back

  in the old routine,

  the first day home

  littered with clichés -

  the greenest fields, builders’ tea,

  the lunchtime cricket scores

  intoned like poetry

  and it’s not quite warm enough

  to sit outside.

  Starling Twilight

  The starlings

  go by their own

  version of twilight.

  It’s a little earlier

  than ours –

  I think they like

  to be seen

  as they flock

  home to roost,

  thousands of them

  performing as one,

  using the sky

  like a cinema screen.

  I watch them

  whenever I can,

  it’s the way

  they trust each other

  that does it for me.

  The Dog’s Leg

  Most things work out

  as expected –

  another war in the Middle-East,

  the bank rate up or down

  or staying the same

  and a red sky at night

  almost never fails.

  It’s the other things

  that worry me –

  the ones that come from nowhere,

  come too close,

  you know the sort of thing,

  a tornado in Rugby

  and my dog’s broken leg.

  The Exile

  There’s no History here,

  no trace of a past,

  as if the whole place

  sprang up from nothing

  last Tuesday morning

  to meet me off the plane.

  There’s no night life

  and as for the food

  every dish seems to contain

  aubergines. On the other hand,

  the local schnapps

  is terrific and cheap as chips.

 

  Apart from the aubergines and schnapps

  there appears to be no industry.

  The people are pleasant enough

  but no one speaks English.

  Their language is impassable,

  riddled with mysterious inflections,

  and it has no future tense.

  The Widow

  He knew this battered suitcase far longer

  than he knew me. It was his father’s.

  Sometimes I open it up and memories fly out

  like birds and fill the room

  – the songs he learned in Kindergarten,

  his mother’s onion soup,

  the hot midsummer streets of Pankow

  – his memories, not ours.

  He passed them on to me,

  I keep them safe.

  Under New Management

  It will happen at some ungodly hour

  when no one, least of all God,

  is expecting it –

  dark angels rushing the gates,

  St. Peter brushed aside

  and in no time at all

  God is packing his things

  in an infinity

  of cardboard boxes.

  Career Change

  What he would really have liked

  was to work on the land.

  He ended up in insurance

  but one night he dreamed

  he was driving a tractor,

  mobbed by admiring gulls,

  as he scored an endless field

  with flawless furrowed lines.

  Next morning in the office,

  still quickened by the country air,

  he cut down thickets of paper,

  a madman with a scythe.

  THANK YOU

  I would like to thank Julie Fox for her encouragement and practical support.