In darkness. In rain. Yourself at the very point
where what's yours bleeds off through the pallings
to terra incognita, and the night's blood-hunt
starts up in the brush: the notion of something smiling
as it slinks in now for the rush and sudden shunt.
A woman is laying a table; the cloth
billows as it settles; a wine-glass catches the light.
A basket for bread, spoons and bowls for broth
as you know, just as you know how slight
a hold you have on this: a lit window, the faint
odour of iodine in the rainfall's push and pull.
Now she looks out, but you're invisible
as you planned, though maybe it's a failing
to stand at one remove, to watch, to want
everything stalled and held on an indrawn breath.
The house, the woman, the window, the lamplight falling
short of everything except bare earth -
can you see how it seems, can you tell
why you happen to be just here, where the garden path
runs of to black, still watching
as she turns away, sharply, as if in fright,
while the downpour thickens and her shadow on the wall,
trembling, is given over to the night?
Surely it's that moment from the myth
in which you look back and everything goes to hell.
David Harsent, Night, Faber & Faber, 2011
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