66MUSEUM PIECES

Feathers, bones, beaks and feet

National Library of New Zealand /
Museum of Natural History, Oxford

In the drawer’s forest-scented

darkness I lie on my back.

An impossible posture —

claws grip dead air

where no branch could be,

head thrown back beyond

the reach of song.

According to inheritance

I should have been

an evergreen bird;

instead I flare this rare

and fatally desirable

sun-yellow. Even so,

even here, there is reason

to be thankful. For example

the display case titled

Feathers, Bones, Beaks and Feet.

Someone out there is resurrecting

viruses from the Pleistocene, and

one day surely useless beauty

too will stage its comeback:

bigger, better, cosseted, and

harbouring one vengeful

67and unseen disease preserved

and nurtured for millennia

by my unforgetting half-

sisters, the harpies.

Musée d’Art Moderne et d’Art Contemporain, Nice

Haematoma of

the blood orange.

Bodies painting with

International Klein Blue.

A calligraphic swan dive

towards oblivion

is not something to desire —

but if there is no exit why

not make it elegant

stop motion or

get carried away with

grim panache on

Grünewald’s motorbike,

in Geronimo’s Cadillac?

68Musée Marc Chagall, Nice

Inside the ark it was at first all white

and green. He seemed to be targeting

the churches with His fire-power;

even out here on the new

fomented sea, a self-annihilating

fury, the atom boom of light-struck spires

and temples echoing as they fell. The lack

of a gap between thunder and

lightning told Noah’s menagerie

that God was on top of them, shouting,

out of control and fit to break His own

fair universe in two. So Noah rolled

into a ball and held what was left

of his breath and the small wet

creature nearest him, a marmot,

as the ark was pushed under

into green and bruise-dark blue.

The giraffe’s puzzled face

spun past on the pivot

of its neck, and even the hippo

couldn’t tell which way was air

and up among the roiling

bubbles. No reasoning

with a creator in that state,

best make like the hedgehog

and wait for Him to blow Himself out

of the water. And sure enough,

after everything was good

and broken, the air did clear,

and the sky attained a glorious

69stained-glass shade of blue

above the calmest

emptiest mirror ever seen

on the face of the deep.

But Noah was not, never

would again be, fooled.

Musée du quai Branly, Paris

The mask is ironred, charblack,

its eyes outlined white

with porridge and birdshit.

I disappear when I put

it on, invisible even

to myself as I step

into firelight and voices.

Your drum may talk the rain

down from the clouds but I

am weaving the world

with these words.

Do not get in my way.

With weapon-shaped money

I will conquer my enemies.

With the cicatrice

70of song I will reanimate

the dead for an army.

Do not get in my way:

I am weaving the world.

Step back from the mask or

with stone blade and spear-tip

with thirst, famine, warfare,

it will carve the lost

world on your face.

Song of la chouette

Musée Picasso, Antibes

The bird in the hand is an owl.

The owl has an artist’s eyes.

With them across alps and

over cliffs of sleeping women

it flies, looking for fissures and

plateaus, chair-backs and shoulders

spotting and looking and taking

in what cowers among the boulders.

At night the small round bird

balloons to voodoo mask,

a stringless kite, no jess or trace

to draw it back — yet faithful

it returns to the hangar and the man

71who recalibrates the sights; grateful

and silent, he builds le grand hibou

in black and white. One night the owl

drops his eyes in ancient Greece.

They calmly lie and see for weeks

until the bird, on another hunt,

plucks them up in its feet.

The bird holds the eyes in its claws.

The man hoods the bird in his palm.

The blind mice run at night. The owl means

no harm. The artist it darkly serves

paints under cloudless skies.

I am the bird. You are the prize.

Religion

Chapelle Saint-Pierre, Villefranche-sur-Mer

This small stone chamber on the water is

about the size of it, and this Peter, human,

foolish, fallible. Forget the pile

of antique treasure on the Roman

hill — my religion stables only

the locals: astonished fish, and gypsies, and

two seahorses in love can take

their place amid the drawn out story

where the eyes of the pêcheurs swim upwards

in surprise as one of their number

72becomes the catch of heaven. In my religion,

even ghosts of colours shed their light,

earth sun and water filter into lines

that leap skyward with the flying

fish, and as you turn to leave, two

pairs of eyes on bright green stalks

either side of the trompe l’oeil door

will give the older gods a look-in.

I see no higher than these low-

ceilinged angels, whose flaring white

sails spread above the fleet that’s sped

by human voices — the one and only

prayer, safe home, each family makes

before the loved one steps from stone

to blue, and the pêcheurs’ version:

let me walk on the glass roof

of the fishes without falling through.

As the boats come in, a glass

of sangria, blood-red and orange,

is offered on the quay. Succour

enough. The waves can have

and roll and chew over the body.

quai Branly (ii)

In the days when we ate what we wanted to be

and appearances took us in

completely as houses

we asked the gods to visit and they came

with their animal faces, shaking

their manes of feather and fibre

73and making their repeated claims

on us to honour and obey and feed

them some of us. Back then

it seemed a fair exchange, today

they give us nothing, not even

a song. We are grown thin with

not knowing what to want

to be: something swallowed stuck

in the gullet and will not move

no matter how we stamp

and clap each other

on the back and make the sounds

to call them down, they do not come.

What can we raise in their place?

The earth does not care

for our praise. Not one

face here will do the trick.

Whose hand will hook

the fishbone out? Who

can unblock the airway

between the gods and us?

74Galerie Pictural / Villa Paloma / Jardin Botanique, Monaco

Dalí’s greying waxed

moustache. His high life

photographed.

Starfish, Nemo, purple

resin shark — then

cacti, cave, prehistory.

Unreal city,

cleanest on the coast,

your bankers

frankly advertise

wealth management.

Death and taxes

have their ministers

here, the deep’s

contained and

on display and

Dalí in his diving bell

dares you to question

his papal status

in this haven.

You can’t deface

the currency he has

already brazenly

defaced, but deep

75in the dry hill

the cave retains

its question.

Pope Alexander VI prepares his benediction

Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome

The diamonds are pulverised;

the bear has had his arsenic.

The dinner guests are due

at eight. What did not work

at lunchtime will not fail

at supper. No need for the blade’s

straight talk; the stomach

is the place to set up roadblocks

to the heart. In circulation

my plan proceeds its round-

about way. I am death’s diplomat,

sugaring the inevitable with my

glittering tongue. So now the brilliant

goblet’s filled, swift passage guaranteed

to those who’ll drink my health

tonight; they shall be taken care of.