Home Page
POETRY
Essays section Poetry section Books section Audio section Gallery section Video section Online Shop New items Author section Web section
Search this site Site Index
Home » Poetry » Poems by Clive James » Poetry Collections » Nefertiti in the Flak Tower

Andantino

Poetry

  • Guest Poets
  • Poems by Clive James
    • Recent Poems
    • Poetry Collections
      • The Book of My Enemy
      • Angels Over Elsinore
      • Opal Sunset
      • Nefertiti in the Flak Tower
        • Nefertiti in the Flak Tower
        • Oval Room, Wallace Collection
        • Against Gregariousness
        • Fashion Statement
        • Whitman and the Moth
        • Monja Blanca
        • Book Review
        • Vertical Envelopment
        • Nimrod
        • Castle in the Air
        • Culture Clash
        • Language Lessons
        • Pennies for the Shark
        • The Buzz
        • The Later Yeats
        • A Perfect Market
        • Australia Felix
        • Continental Silentia
        • The Falcon Growing Old
        • Habitués
        • Same River Twice
        • Plate Tectonics
        • Message from the Moon
        • And Then They Dream of Love
        • Andantino
        • Spectre of the Rose
        • Stage Door Rocket Science
        • Beachmaster
        • Peter Porter Dances to Piazzolla
        • Silent Sky
        • Signing Ceremony
        • Numismatics
        • Special Needs
        • A Spray of Jasmine
        • A Bracelet for Geoffrey Hill
      • Divine Comedy
  • Back from the Web
  • Poetry Notebook
  • Articles on Poetry
  • Lyrics

from D.959
 
Not much interpretation needed here,
It seems at first.
For once the most mechanical of players
Is as valuable as Schnabel.
 
Isaiah Berlin specified this piece
For his funeral. Listen:
Here, hedge-hopping from the blue horizon
Comes that little phrase again, straight out of Proust.
 
Play it again, Katsumi. And she does,
As if arranging flowers:
The echo where you never quite expect it.
I wake in hospital. My mother’s here
 
With sweets and comic books and a lead soldier.
I was saved by penicillin.
And now here comes the bit that tells you he
Could not possibly have died at 31.
 
And here’s that same phrase flying low, so near
And yet so far. So far,
So good, like a lovely woman smiling.
May it never, never stop. Not this, not now.
 
So some interpretation needed, then,
If just to be aware
What won’t work here. It wants a master’s tact.
That swine Cortot, that sweet man Rubinstein,
 
Both brought the fine touch that leaves well alone.
Here she falls short
But not by far. Respect the intervals,
Trying not to interfere. Brava! Well done.
 
Fly back to Tokyo with all my thanks,
Young lady. Third at Leeds,
You leave me happy here, and pleased for him,

Where he lies buried next to Beethoven.

    Top  
  • About
  • Contact
  • Copyright
  • Index
  • Search
  • Site Map