JON STALLWORTHY 1935–


THE ALMOND TREE

I

All the way to the hospital

the lights were green as peppermints.

Trees of black iron broke into leaf

ahead of me, as if

I were the lucky prince

in an enhanted wood

summoning summer with my whistle,

banishing winter with a nod.

Swung by the road from bend to bend,

I was aware that blood was running

down through the delta of my wrist

and under arches

of bright bone. Centuries,

continents it had crossed;

from an undiscovered beginning

spiralling to an unmapped end.

II

Crossing (at sixty) Magdalen Bridge

Let it be a son, a son, said

the man in the driving mirror,

Let it be a son. The tower

held up its hand: the college

bells shook their blessing on his head.

III

I parked in an almond’s

shadow blossom, for the tree

was waving, waving me

upstairs with a child’s hands.

IV

Up

the spinal stair

and at the top

along

a bone-white corridor

the blood tide swung

me swung me to a room

whose walls shuddered

with the shuddering womb.

Under the sheet

wave after wave, wave

after wave beat

on the bone coast, bringing

ashore – whom?

New-

minted, my bright farthing!

Coined by our love, stamped with

our images, how you

enrich us! Both

you make one. Welcome

to your white sheet,

my best poem!

V

At seven-thirty

the visitors’ bell

scissored the calm

of the corridors.

The doctor walked with me

to the slicing doors.

His hand upon my arm,

his voice – I have to tell

you – set another bell

beating in my head:

your son is a mongol

the doctor said.

VI

How easily the word went in –

clean as a bullet

leaving no mark on the skin,

stopping the heart within it.

This was my first death.

The ‘I’ ascending on a slow

last thermal breath

studied the man below

as a pilot treading air might

the buckled shell of his plane –

boot, glove, helmet

feeling no pain

from the snapped wires’ radiant ends.

Looking down from a thousand feet

I held four walls in the lens

of an eye: wall, window, the street

a torrent of windscreens, my own

car under its almond tree,

and the almond waving me down.

I wrestled against gravity.

but light was melting and the gulf

cracked open. Unfamiliar

the body of my late self

I carried to the car.

VII

The hospital – its heavy freight

lashed down ship-shape ward over ward –

steamed into night with some on board

soon to be lost if the desperate

charts were known. Others would come

altered to land or find the land

altered. At their voyage’s end

some would be added to, some

diminished. In a numbered cot

my son sailed from me; never to come

ashore into my kingdom

speaking my language. Better not

look that way. The almond tree

was beautiful in labour. Blood-

dark, quickening, bud after bud

split, flower after flower shook free.

On the darkening wind a pale

face floated. Out of reach. Only when

the buds, all the buds, were broken

would the tree be in full sail.

In labour the tree was becoming

itself. I, too, rooted in earth

and ringed by darkness, from the death

of myself saw myself blossoming,

wrenched from the caul of my thirty

years’ growing, fathered by my son,

unkindly in a kind season

by love shattered and set free.