Notting Hill Carnival
August bank holiday in Notting Hill, Stuck in a two-thirds empty sushi bar, I drink the cheapest soup dish on the menu And discuss tactics: entry points, how far, To walk or haggle, Who’s Who. Then the bill Comes, and I pay. Pay cash, says Jimmy, then you Won’t waste your cash on beer. We all decide Vaguely to join the one-way crowd outside,
And it begins, this packed conveyor belt Of costumes, crowded streets, and creditcards. Scaffolded billboards boast of low gun-crime,
And the Olympic Games. In strewn frontyards A hustling local sells canned drinks: a melt Of watered-down Bacardi, ice, and lime. Above the press, a greying pigeon skirls Through the tall air. Indifferent teenage girls
Lounge in the packed heat. We keep walking. Where’s The actual carnival? I ask, as out Of sight, down Portobello Road, a float Trawls sullenly away through a tired shout Of casual-clothed spectators. Shrugs and stares Follow, uselessly. Noise sticks in my throat. I think the carnival is further down, Says Jimmy, so we push on further down And still find nothing but wide public squares Fist-tight with people, absolutely rammed With immigrants, foodstuffs for sale, light beer In plastic pitchers. Half-sloshed in a crammed Chain pub, I stand a round, and repeat: Where’s The carnival? As if it might appear Ex nihilo. Our drunken thoughts expand Beyond the Standing Room Only bar, and I think of China, rebuilt: all the bored World elsewhere. But by now the carnival Has swelled into an aimless weary push Of people searching for a carnival That isn’t there. The strangers I ignored Were the whole show. Tracksuited mothers shush Their state-schooled children, eating parodies Of ethic food (jerk chicken, rice and peas, A saleable familiarity Of brandnames: Burger King, McDonalds), and Litter the streets with ordinary trash Behind them. It goes on. Policemen stand Luminous-jacketed, blocking a crash Of mopeds. T-shirts flaunt the slogan: FREE AT LAST. A random and indifferent crowd Heaves on, and all the vomit-coloured loud Distraction trick is emptying, as if It never happened. Condom-sellers pack Their cash and disappointment in white vans, And drive home. The brash upbeat heartattack Disintegrates, through thinning reeks of spliff And Cuba Libre, facepaint and steel pans, And, anticlimaxed, its rushed business Lulls, until the moral of the story is: Things cost their own cost, and they take the time They take. Stuck in a Bakerloo line station, Hours later, with no money left, we wile Boredom away with tedious conversation. A train comes, with its endless travelling mime Of billboard advertising, and I think I’ll Discover something final. (The thought proves Mistaken.) Doors hiss shut, and the train moves, And nothing happens, so I think of China Distantly: sprawling red industrial host Of the Olympic Games. (One World. One Dream.) Its immense ceremonies shout a host Of hyperbolic untruths, about China, And faith, and progress. My own small thoughts seem Irrelevant. A hail of imprecise Rain taps the windows like flung grains of rice.
BUS No. 205
Commuters at the bus-stop stare At time "paid in arrears" Transfixed on the same distance where The 205 appears
The 205 the 205 MILE END to PADDINGTON Its layers of compound grime survive The blasting of the rain Wheels heave its doubledecker ark Its diesel engines thrum The MILE END ROAD is mottled like A drained aquarium Unshaved Executives await A lunchtime press of hands As punctured bike-tyres half deflate By empty coffeestands Delivery lorries haul their cheap Real Ale to THE MASH TUN As hooded pigeons scram and creep Like thieves to FARRINGDON Snide barristers from BOW support Divorce for wife and widow Poor ANGEL leans its wearied thought And forehead on the window Terse rain is wiped from car windshields And timetabled en route The famous graves at BUNHILL FIELDS Lie manicured and mute Blue tourist plaques encrust the streets Stiff and barnacled and numb My hard and hammering heart repeats Its brag to Kingdom Come: “What trammelled standstill weighs my head With paralysed routine? Why do the traffic lights turn red? What does the weather mean?” |