Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 May 2021
The Butterfly Hears Tchaikovsky
Did it blunder in from the street?
Worse, imagine it reborn
among the platform flowers,
the first venture of delicate wings
wafting it straight to hell.
Our minds flooded with metaphor –
Francesca, Paolo, the manic winds
they’re whirled in, all music
out of a soul in torment –
we watch that silky flier
lost in the glare, bewildered by
the shock of storming brass.
Flickering, it soars, dips,
traverses, its frail career
scribbled on art in a real
violence. When the applause breaks
it's gone – twitching perhaps
beside a player's foot, finished off
by the tuba's final blast,
the sumptuous crash of gong and cymbals.
RICHARD KELL
Old Usher
for Farès Moussa
I have
shouted Lights! in the foyer as the show begins
I have
opened and closed a million doors
Push and Pull stamping my palms
I have
woken with Good Evening on my lips
I have
ROH in moles over my left nipple
I have
Tchaikovsky as a heart-beat
I have
told ten thousand bladders
It's down the slope and on the right
I have
stood at the bottom of Floral Hall stairs
with Peter Bramley at the top
tapping the metal hand-rail with his ring
to annoy me
I have
bent my head to complaints about the row in front
the big hair-do, the change-jingler, those who snore or smell
I have
turned a blind eye, a deaf ear, and a stopped nostril
I have
opened and closed a million doors
Push and Pull stamping my palms
I have
waited in the wings to present flowers
cygnets wafting past me in a crush of tutus
each back tight with the cordage of muscle
I have
sold ices with Susie Boyle
I have
passed the black-and-white monitor at Stage Door
and felt proud to see Haitink in the pit
a bottled homunculus preserved in music
I have
opened my locker on a vista of dirty shirts
I have
killed a moth for Monica Mason
It wants to settle on me!
she who once danced her death in the Rite
now frightened of millimetres of flutter
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