I don't really have a thing for Andrew Motion, but I read one of his poetry collections recently. I can't say that I was particularly impressed with what I read. One poem, 'Dead March', however, really struck me. I've changed the formatting from that which I found on the internet to that which I remember reading in the book. I don't like how it starts, but I need a responsible adult with a defibrillator to get through the final stanza.
It’s twenty years (It’s not, its twenty-three- be accurate) since you were whisked away (I wasn't whisked away: I broke my skull) and I was left to contemplate your life. (My life. Ridiculous. You mean my death.)
Well, twenty or twenty-three. I can’t decide if that’s a long time or no time at all, or whether everything I've said since then, and thought, and done, to try and work out how the way we treat our lives might be involved with how our lives treat us is more than just a waste of breath. That’s right. A waste of breath.
You see, you’re always with me even though you’re nowhere, nothing, dead to all the world you interrupt me when I start to talk, you are the shadow dragging at my heels. This means I can’t step far enough away to get the thing I want you to explain in focus, and I can’t lean close enough to hear the words you speak and feel their weight.
And if I could, what difference would it make? It’s like I said. I can’t decide. It’s just that having you suspended all these years at some clear mid-point between life and death has made me think you might have felt your way along the link between the two, and learnt how one deserves the other. Or does not.
I feel I’m standing on a frozen pond Entranced by someone else below the ice, a someone who has found out how to breathe the water and endure the cold and dark. I know I ought to turn my back. I can’t. I also know that if I just stay put and watch the wax-white fingers flop about I’ll start to think they must be beckoning. I stare and stare and stare and stare and stare. It’s twenty years since you were whisked away, or twenty-three. That’s more than half my life.