Hydra At the jungle research station in Manaus, they keep a brown electric eel in a dishwater-coloured goit, that looked to me, when it was pointed out, more like a dead palm-leaf, or, side-on, a length of gutter pipe. But as I said to the man who was showing us round, dingy or not, you have to take your hat off to a beast that keeps itself to itself for the most part, but when touched transforms a single thought into several thousand volts. Simon Armitage Things There are worse things than having behaved foolishly in public. There are worse things than these miniature betrayals, committed or endured or suspected; there are worse things than not being able to sleep for thinking about them. It is 5 a.m. All the worse things come stalking in and stand icily about the bed looking worse and worse and worse. Fleur Adcock Those shady girls Those shady girls on the green side of the street, those far-from-green girls who keep to the shade, those shady girls in mysterious suits with their labels half-showing as the cream flap of the jacket swings open, those girls kicking aside the front panelled pleats of their cream suits with cerise lapels, those on-coming girls, those girls swinging pearly umbrellas as tightly-sheathed as tulips in bud from an unscrupulous street-seller, those girls in cream and cerise suits which mark if you touch them, those girls with their one name appointments who walk out of the sunshine. Helen Dunmore In My Country walking by the waters down where an honest river shakes hands with the sea, a woman passed round me in a slow watchful circle, as if I were a superstition; or the worst dregs of her imagination, so when she finally spoke her words spliced into bars of an old wheel. A segment of air. Where do you come from? ‘Here,’ I said, ‘Here. These parts.’ Jackie Kay Stargazing The night is fine and dry. It falls and spreads the cold sky with a million opposites that, for a moment, seem like a million souls and soon, none, and then, for what seems a long time, one. Then of course it spins. What is better to do than string out over the infinite dead spaces the ancient beasts and spearmen of the human mind, and, if not the real ones, new ones? But, try making them clear to one you love – whoever is standing by you is one you love when pinioned by the stars – you will find it quite impossible, but like her more for thinking she sees that constellation. After the wave of pain, you will turn to her and, in an instant, change the universe to a sky you were glad you came outside to see. This is the act of all the descended gods of every age and creed: to weary of all that never ends, to take a human hand, and go back into the house. Glyn Maxwell |