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Excerpt from Spacecraft Voyager 1Sonnet Spacecraft Voyager 1 has boldly gone into Deep Silence carrying a gold-plated disc inscribed with whale-song it has bleeped back a last infra-red fragment of language and floated way way up over the jagged edge of this almost endless bright and blowy enclosure of weather to sink through a new texture as tenuous as the soft upward pressure of an elevator and go on and on falling up steep flights of blackness with increasing swiftness beyond the Crystalline Cloud of the Dead beyond Plato beyond Copernicus O meticulous swivel cameras still registering events among those homeless spaces gathering in that silence that hasn’t yet had time to speak in that increasing sphere of tiny runaway stars notched in the year now you can look closely at massless light that is said to travel freely but is probably in full flight Ballad of a Shadow Take from me my voice and I shall voiceless go to find you; take from me my face, I’ll trek the hills invisibly, my strength, and I shall run but keep no pace. Even in cities, take the sense with which I reason and I shall seek, but close it in your heart, keep this and forget this and this, when we’re apart, will be the shadow game of love. And I shall love in secret and I shall love in crowds and love in darkness, in the quiet outlet of shadows, and in cities as a ghost walking unnoticed, and love with books, using their pages like a wind, not reading, and with people, latticed by words but through the lattice loving. And when at last my love is understood, with you I shall not love but breathe and turn by breathing into flesh and blood. The mud-spattered recollections of a woman who lived her life backwards I’ll tell you a tale: one morning one morning I lay in my uncomfortable six-foot small grave, I lay sulking about a somewhat too short-lit life both fruitful and dutiful. It was death it was death like an inbreath fully inhaled in the grief of the world when at last there began to emerge a way out, alas the in-snowing silence made any description difficult. No eyes no matches and yet mathematically speaking I could still reach at a stretch a waspish whiteish last seen outline any way up, which could well be my own were it only a matter of re-folding. So I creased I uncreased and the next thing I knew I was pulled from the ground at the appointed hour and rushed to the nearest morgue to set out yet again from the bed to the floor to the door to the air. And there was the car still there in its last known place under the rain where I’d left it, my husband etc. even myself, in retrospect I was still there still driving back with the past all spread out already in front of me. What a refreshing whiff with the windows open! there were the dead leaves twitching and tacking back to their roosts in the trees and all it required was a certain minimum level of inattention. I tell you, for many years from doorway to doorway and in through a series of rooms I barely noticed I was humming the same tune twice, I was seeing the same three children racing towards me getting smaller and smaller. This tale’s like a rose, once opened it cannot reclose, it continues: one morning one terrible morning for maybe the hundredth time they came to insert my third child back inside me. It was death it was death: from head to foot I heard myself crack with the effort, I leaned and cried and a feeling fell on me with a dull clang that I’d never see my darling daughter again. Then both my sons, slowly at first then faster and faster, their limbs retracted inwards smaller and smaller till all that remained was a little mound where I didn’t quite meet in the middle. Well either I was or was not either living or dead in a windowless cubicle of the past, a mere 8.3 light minutes from the present moment when at last my husband walked oh dear he walked me to church. All in one brief winter’s day, both braced for confusion with much shy joy, reversed our vows, unringed our hands and slid them back in our pockets God knows why. What then what then I’ll tell you what then: one evening there I stood in the matchbox world of childhood and saw the stars fall straight through Jimmy’s binoculars, they looked so weird skewered to a fleeting instant. Then again and again for maybe the hundredth time they came to insert me feet first back into nothing complete with all my missing hopes—next morning there was that same old humming thrum still there. That same old humming thrumming sounds that is either my tape re-winding again or maybe it’s stars passing through stars coming back to their last known places, for as far as I know in the end both sounds are the same. From Spacecraft Voyager 1. Copyright 2007 by Alice Oswald. All rights reserved. |
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