Post-war Childhoods

for Takeshi Kusafuka

If there were no affliction in this world we might think we were in paradise.

Simone Weil, Gravity and Grace

You, born in Tokyo

In nineteen forty-four,

Knew the simplicity

Occasioned by a war.

In London it was so,

Even in victory –

In defeat, how much more.

Knew it I say – and yet,

Born to it, you and I,

How could we in truth have known?

It was the world. You try

To make articulate,

In language not your own,

What it was like and why.

Nature returned (you say)

To downtown Tokyo –

In your voice, some irony

Defending your need to go

That far: what other way

Of like economy

Is there of saying so?

Your images declare

The substance of the phrase:

Bomb craters, urban grass,

A slowworm flexing the gaze

Of the boy crouching there;

Moths, splayed on the glass,

Like hands lifted in praise.