Chandelier
Decades ago my late friend
Martin Booth drove us from Cambridge
to London where we read
at the Poetry Centre with
beveled windows behind us, on an afternoon
multi-mullioned.
The rain through which we'd
sped that November Sunday
had stopped,
& in that elegant room
light intensified from behind us, coalesced
on Martin's back
where he stood at a carved
oak lectern & railed against English manners,
& remembered Chatterton,
& diatribed the current
poetry scene in Britain as puerile, sterile,
& said that the American
here with him today wasn't,
so that by the time I read, half the audience
had sworn patriotic allegiance
to all those Martin labeled "decorous
versifiers," & were pissed at me.
I
don't remember
what poems of mine I spoke, nature
or the Holocaust or both, but now
I'll leave merry England—
its chandelier disappears as
the room brightens with prisms
of polite applause,
then Martin's fierce aspect
as he slammed his car door & drove us out of there
like bards from hell.
(Martin
Booth 1944-2004)
— William Heyen
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