For Whom the Bell Tolls Page 9
Were you ever a soldier,
A rifle or machine gun holder,
Could you strip a Bren and name its parts,
Were you trained in the battlefield’s dark arts?
Were you ever in the gunners’ sights,
Did you fear the sudden, sharp fire-fights
And the ghostly dawns and thunderous nights?
And were you, in some trench line, made aware
By the flickering falling light of a parachute flare
And the wind-rush of the shot that parts your hair
Of the edge-of-madness human wreckage there?
And did you shake to the Serbian mortars, knowing
The different sounds of incoming and outgoing?
Did you take the gloomy TriStar to Iraq
And wonder how much of you would come back?
And did you reflect on the amputees
And the ambushes and IEDs
And green-on-blue fatalities
And the massacre at Gandamak
And defeats dressed up as victories
And the war of the phantom WMDs
And such mendacities as these?
And if you did not know and were not there,
Then how dare you, a laptop bombardier,
Presume to join the Devil’s chorus for
Another wasteful, sacrificial war?
Muammar Gaddafi 1942–2011
Power’s a narcotic and an elixir,
Whoever has it won’t relinquish it
Until his final scene, a swift exit –
Better by ballot, but by bullet where
He owes his hold on it to force and fear.
The father of his people (aren’t they all?)
For forty years he held them in his thrall,
They did his bidding but they loved him not.
He was the author of his own downfall,
Found hiding in a storm drain, lynched and shot.
The Green Book of his multilingual ravings
Can now be pulped and turned to paper shavings;
We need not mourn his jamahiriya
Or self-styled ‘state of the masses’,
Nor the man himself, prince of jackasses
And planetary pariah.
War Crimes Tribunal
In January 2013 I testified in The Hague in the trial of Ratko Mladic, the former commander of the Bosnian Serb Army, who in 1992 ordered his forces to bomb Sarajevo ‘to the edge of madness’.
The sound of seagulls plays on a loop in the Carlton Beach Hotel,
I am listed there as a number not a name,
And a crowd of ghosts is checked in just the same.
On a screen in the darkened room the scenes from hell
Unfold of the siege and its victims as if tethered,
And the guilt that lurks in the great box files
Of craters, bombs and projectiles
And high rise ruins, miles on miles:
No seagulls there but birds of prey unfeathered,
Hard-eyed and hatred-driven and unforgiving,
Training their rifles and RPGs
On a city of flinching refugees.
Yet once I ran the trench lines among these
And thought, what a wild way to earn a living,
But the courtroom newsreels stand as bedrock fact,
And the edge-of-madness man, in the dock, avoids eye contact.
Published in the Wenlock Poetry Festival Anthology, April 2013
War Zones
If you’re in the front line you live by the minute
And the skin of your teeth and understand
When you enter a village with no people in it,
And no chickens either, it’s no man’s land.
There are two sounds of mortar rounds
The soldiers all agree,
The outgoing is a defiant ‘F*** you!’
The incoming a scared ‘F*** me!’
Mission Impossible
If you should seek the Holy Grail
Or try and catch a falling star,
You’re absolutely bound to fail;
Likewise if you suppose your lover
Can be transformed to someone other
As you direct her life anew
(While she supposes that of you),
You’re also on a dead end trail,
For in the end we are who we are
And we do what we do what we do.
Terms of Endearment
I am assertive, you are aggressive,
I am determined, you are oppressive,
I am affectionate, you are possessive,
I am proportionate, you are excessive:
Love’s skirmishes and battles of attrition
Tend to be won and lost by definition.
The Suitcase
In matters of the heart my life’s a drag:
My longest love affair was with a bag,
A war zone suitcase dented scuffed and battered
Which, once being lost in transit, left me shattered.
And when it was returned by God’s good grace,
Of all scenarios that was the best case.
Starstruck
In Geneva in October 2011 I introduced an awards ceremony honouring Angelina Jolie for her ten years’ service to UNHCR, the United Nations Refugee Agency.
I used to think, till I met Angelina,
The far side of the hill was always greener;
But since our meeting I can see
The place where I would rather be
Is on the same hillside as Ms Jolie.
Alice
The difference between Brits and Germans
Which we should understand
Is that their alles is in ordnung
And ours in Wonderland.
Radio Set
If you achieve your three score years and ten,
Stay in ‘Receive’ for most of it and then
If you’ve learned anything at all from it
You’ve earned the right (perhaps) to press ‘Transmit’.
Mightier than the Sword
When words are out there on their own,
Just hanging in the air, alone
Forlorn and solitary,
They’re nothing like as mighty as the sword,
And no match for the military;
But properly deployed, arrayed,
Well organised and on parade,
Then words in the right order feel
So much more potent than cold steel,
And that’s when we say ‘Praise the Lord
And pass the dictionary!’
Limericks
There once was a man so uxorious
He offered a future luxurious
To the girl of his dreams
But she vetoed his schemes
And left him frustrated and furious.
There was a man of Rawalpindi
Who on a day stormy and windy
Got lost in the bush
Of the high Hindu Kush
Because he spoke Urdu not Hindi.
There was a man of Salvador
Whose country was often at war,
So he thought, how terrific
To be more Pacific,
And he set up his home on that shore.
The Cat
I have a friend who lives outdoors,
Then comes inside and purrs and claws
And curls up on the mat.
She lives apart and walks alone,
Is no one else’
s but her own,
All places are alike to her,
With eyes that shine like Lucifer
She’s the companion I prefer
And my Magnificat.
The Vulture
So fallen are we that our culture
Reflects the values of the vulture;
Our destiny hangs in a balance
Decided not by rule of law
But birds of prey and dogs of war
And nature red in tooth and claw
And ministries of the talons.
George Osborne MP
I was Independent MP for Tatton from 1997 to 2001. I promised my constituents that I would serve them for one term only. My successor was the Conservative George Osborne, now Chancellor of the Exchequer. I am occasionally reproached for keeping my promise and so helping to launch his career.
Being naive and new to Parliament
And not one of its doubting Thomases,
I thought that MPs, saying what they meant,
Were honour bound to keep their promises.
I’d no idea it was their privilege,
When backed into some awkward situation,
To redefine a stated, solemn pledge
As no more than a hopeful aspiration.
So blame me for my actions in Committee,
For parliamentary motions that were passed,
For challenging corruption in the City,
For late night votes that were or were not cast;
For being holier-than-thou and pristine,
For causing great offence to Neil and Christine,
Routinely failing to put ticks in boxes,
For voting both for foxhounds and for foxes;
For being dissident and out-of-kilter,
A one-man awkward squad and windmill-tilter;
For speeches that might well stick in the gorge
Of party loyalists who could determine
The route to take to end up clad in ermine –
But don’t you ever dare blame me for George!
Margaret Thatcher RIP
They asked if I wished to sign the book of condolence
Of the Warrior Queen and Lady of Iron and Steel
And promoter of Tory MPs like Hamilton (Neil).
In death as in life she divided the nation with violence
And left it a prey to its appetites, unedified.
Then I thought of the soldiers and sailors who died,
And how at the end, for the sake of the look of the news,
The amputees were placed in the far back pews.
With the book unsigned, I passed by on the other side.
Politicians
My four years as an MP taught me that clever people can be more stupid than stupid people.
With a despatch box as their prize
They lace their rhetoric with lies,
They plot and scheme and strategise,
They blow their smoke-screens in our eyes,
They preach, pursue and proselytise
The party line for ever:
We need our politicians wise,
Which ain’t the same as clever.
Phone Hacking
Amid the papers’ patriotic noise
(These were the ones which backed our boys),
A reptile of a journalist from hell
Conspired and schemed and basely misconceived
A plan that when our gallant soldiers fell
He’d hack into the phones of the bereaved.
Now here’s the question: true or false,
That while such men were shameless,
Their editors in marble halls
Were absolutely blameless.
The Acronym
Most of the TV news I see is rather
Superficial, weary, stale and flat:
It’s Comprehensive Rubbish And Palaver,
And there’s an acronym for that.
The Drone
Twinkle twinkle little star
Shining on us from afar
Distant, celestial and serene,
So brilliant and alone,
We pause to wonder what you are
And what your radiance may mean,
Unless you’re just a loitering drone
And targeted killing machine.
Aesthetics
Consider it aesthetically
The way that warfare goes,
The missile is the poetry,
The infantry the prose.
The Enemy
I still remember the searchlights
Like fairy beams on blackout nights,
The drone of planes from aerodromes,
Tin signs that warned of Fritz’s bombs
And how aged eight my fantasy
Was to destroy his UXB,
Butterfly bombs in fields and ditches,
Such dreams of glory were my riches.
So many years and war zones later
I sense the dangers so much greater,
And I have met the enemy
Who is no longer him but me,
The anger, hate and animus
That lurk in every one of us,
And, baleful as the years that pass,
I see him in the looking glass.
Pythagoras
There once was a native waterway so angular,
Its course was virtually triangular;
And the name for this river in common use
Was the Mighty Flowing Tennessee Hypotenuse.
The Apache and the Cherokee
Had such a sense of symmetry
That when time came for them to choose
Their partners, squaws or brides,
They thought that the squaw on the Hypotenuse
Was equal to the sum of the squaws on the other two sides.
Clerihews
The Emperor Nero
Was a political zero,
His infamy well-earned
By fiddling while Rome burned.
Henry the Navigator
Was inspiration and creator
Of charts and maps of great success
Five hundred years before the GPS.
Catherine of Aragon
Was hardly a paragon,
But she deserved a better life
Than being Henry VIII’s first wife.
Oliver Cromwell, Great Protector,
Threw his weight about in the public sector:
He said the MPs he expelled by force
Had no more religion than his horse.
General Ulysses Grant
Was a great commandant,
But his judgements were risky
When he drank too much whisky.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel
Was a genius without parallel,
But his dreams were realised and made work
Entirely by other people’s spadework.
General William (‘Uncle Bill’) Slim
Caused more grief to the foe than the foe did to him:
His success was total and complete
In snatching victory from defeat.
President Lyndon Baines Johnson
Had the force of a human monsoon,
But he got his calculations wrong
About the Vietcong.
Michele Obama,
Having fallen for a charmer,
Was persuaded to elope
By his Audacity of Hope.
Footballer Mario Balotelli
Never needed a causus belli:
After each eccentricity
He asked ‘Why is it always me?’
Jessica Ennis
Asked ‘Anyone for tennis?’
And as there wasn’t she went and won
The Olympic heptathlon.
Norway
When it comes to rating great Norwegians
There aren’t exactly legions and legions;
But you know you’re in Norway when for league after league
You see nothing but statues of Ibsen and Grieg;
And on every one of them sits a seagull,
Which shows you that, all things being equal,
If you’re Norwegian, famous and dead
You’ll be stuck there for years with a bird on your head,
And the bird isn’t just admiring the view
But regularly doing what birds do
On you.
Norwegians drink antifreeze or schnapps
Which causes multiple mishaps:
And thus the schnapps or antifreeze
Brings sober Norway to its knees.
My Mother
When the old man died she took it personally, as an act of infidelity,
That he just decamped, disappeared without warning, a shattering stop to their melody.
Then she worried about money, of which she had more than enough,
We reckoned she’d be a hundred and forty before she ran out of the stuff.
Next, she put her things in order. No one ever tried harder
To cover their tracks. She was a world class discarder.
And when she went, she left just clothes and shoes
And an envelope labelled ‘string too short to use’.
Truth and Falsehood
My venerable encyclopaedia,
Grave and august and leather-bound,
Was friend and guide and storehouse.
Its errant offspring, multi-media,