Tonight there's a crowd in my head:
all the things you are not yet.
You
are words without paper, pages
sighing in summer forests, gardens
where
builders stub out their rubble
and plastic oozes its sweat.
All
the things you are, you are not yet.
Not yet the lonely window in
midwinter
with the whine of tea on an empty stomach,
not yet the
heating you can't afford and must wait for,
tamping a coin in on each
hour.
Not the gorgeous shush of restaurant doors
and their
interiors, always so much smaller.
Not the smell of the newsprint,
the blur
on your fingertips — your fame. Not yet
the love you
will have for Winter Pearmains
and Chanel No 5 — and then your being
unable
to buy both washing-machine and computer
when your baby's
due to be born,
and my voice saying, "I'll get you one"
and you
frowning, frowning
at walls and surfaces which are not mine —
all
this, not yet. Give me your hand,
that small one without a mark
of work on it,
the one that's strange to the washing-up bowl
and
doesn't know Fairy Liquid for whiskey.
Not yet the moment of your
arrival in taxis
at daring destinations, or your being alone at
stations
with the skirts of your fashionable clothes flapping
and
no money for the telephone.
Not yet the moment when I can give
you nothing
so well-folded it fits in an envelope —
a dull letter
you won't reread.
Not yet the moment of your assimilation
in that
river flowing westward: rivers of clothes,
of dreams, an accent
unlike my own
saying to someone I don't know: darling...