Wolfwatching

Woolly-bear white, the old wolf

Is listening to London. His eyes, withered in

Under the white wool, black peepers,

While he makes nudging, sniffing offers

At the horizon of noise, the blue-cold April

Invitation of airs. The lump of meat

Is his confinement. He has probably had all his life

Behind wires, fraying his eye-efforts

On the criss-cross embargo. He yawns

Peevishly like an old man and the yawn goes

Right back into Kensington and there stops

Floored with glaze. Eyes

Have worn him away. Children’s gazings

Have tattered him to a lumpish

Comfort of woolly play-wolf. He’s weary.

He curls on the cooling stone

That gets heavier. Then again the burden

Of a new curiosity, a new testing

Of new noises, new people with new colours

Are coming in at the gate. He lifts

The useless weight and lets it sink back,

Stirring and settling in a ball of unease.

All his power is a tangle of old ends,

A jumble of leftover scraps and bits of energy

And bitten-off impulses and dismantled intuitions.

He can’t settle. He’s ruffling

And re-organizing his position all day

Like a sleepless half-sleep of growing agonies

In a freezing car. The day won’t pass.

The night will be worse. He’s waiting

For the anaesthetic to work

That has already taken his strength, his beauty

And his life.

He levers his stiffness erect

And angles a few tottering steps

Into his habits. He goes down to water

And drinks. Age is thirsty. Water

Just might help and ease. What else

Is there to do? He tries to find again

That warm position he had. He cowers

His hind legs to curl under him. Subsides

In a trembling of wolf-pelt he no longer

Knows how to live up to.

                                              And here

Is a young wolf, still intact.

He knows how to lie, with his head,

The Asiatic eyes, the gunsights

Aligned effortless in the beam of his power.

He closes his pale eyes and is easy,

Bored easy. His big limbs

Are full of easy time. He’s waiting

For the chance to live, then he’ll be off.

Meanwhile the fence, and the shadow-flutter

Of moving people, and the roller-coaster

Roar of London surrounding, are temporary,

And cost him nothing, and he can afford

To prick his ears to all that and find nothing

As to forest. He still has the starlings

To amuse him. The scorched ancestries,

Grizzled into his back, are his royalty.

The rufous ears and neck are always ready.

He flops his heavy running paws, resplays them

On pebbles, and rests the huge engine

Of his purring head. A wolf

Dropped perfect on pebbles. For eyes

To put on a pedestal. A product

Without a market.

                                  But all the time

The awful thing is happening: the iron inheritance,

The incredibly rich will, torn up

In neurotic boredom and eaten,

Now indigestible. All that restlessness

And lifting of ears, and aiming, and re-aiming

Of nose, is like a trembling

Of nervous breakdown, afflicted by voices.

Is he hearing the deer? Is he listening

To gossip of non-existent forest? Pestered

By the hour-glass panic of lemmings

Dwindling out of reach? He’s run a long way

Now to find nothing and be patient.

Patience is suffocating in all those folds

Of deep fur. The fairy tales

Grow stale all around him

And go back into pebbles. His eyes

Keep telling him all this is real

And that he’s a wolf – of all things

To be in the middle of London, of all

Futile, hopeless things. Do Arctics

Whisper on their wave-lengths – fantasy-draughts

Of escape and freedom? His feet,

The power-tools, lie in front of him –

He doesn’t know how to use them. Sudden

Dramatic lift and re-alignment

Of his purposeful body –

                                                the Keeper

Has come to freshen the water.

And the prodigious journeys

Are thrown down again in his

Loose heaps of rope.

The future’s snapped and coiled back

Into a tangled lump, a whacking blow

That’s damaged his brain. Quiet,

Amiable in his dogginess,

Disillusioned – all that preparation

Souring in his skin. His every yawn

Is another dose of poison. His every frolic

Releases a whole flood

Of new hopelessness which he then

Has to burn up in sleep. A million miles

Knotted in his paws. Ten million years

Broken between his teeth. A world

Stinking on the bone, pecked by sparrows.

He’s hanging

Upside down on the wire

Of non-participation.

He’s a tarot-card, and he knows it.

He can howl all night

And dawn will pick up the same card

And see him painted on it, with eyes

Like doorframes in a desert

Between nothing and nothing.