The dramatist woke…

at 4:48, I remember it from her last play, the darkest time for her, bang in the middle of the graveyard shift. The small hours. But that’s pushing five, you’re only an hour from six and normal life for a lot of people, buses and postmen and happy bakers setting out their shelves. I can easily watch the light coming for an hour, plan out the day to come, canter around in the past. Earlier is worse for me. I’d go for 3:05 as optimum grimness, the first flash from the phone, eyes open and fully awake. Too soon for six and first coffee. Too late to be up watching movies or flicking through Bukowski’s laments. That’s when you sink down into the mattress, heavy as a submarine settling in some hadal pit, too deep to ever swim up from. Too late to turn the lights on for a spell. Too early to try not to get back to sleep, though sleep feels like some impossible mystery, not for the likes of me. Who has the keys to sleep? Five-mile walks help. I was down in Cold Ash to fix the car, had to kill two hours, found a quiet lane to wander. And swam in sleep ’til 8.

I live on the peninsula…

with the Cherwell sluggish and muddy only a few hundred yards from my front door. The Thames curves just a mile to the west, almost wide enough to swallow a thrown stone there but narrowing as it approaches the sandstone walls of the centre. And cut between the rivers is the canal, straight and willow-shaded by Jericho to where it meets the Thames at Sheepwash Channel. Old hands save journey time by learning the bike trails along the canal and the waterpaths, or take to kayaks and coracles and go bobbing along the flood. Older hands still have tales of ice blocks and tumbling in on five-pint night rides, racers snagged on rudders, boats ablaze, killer swans, red-eyed derelicts with spiderweb face tattoos and festival folk wandering in from Aristotle Rec or the Meadow approaches. There’s a single gondola moored at Folly Bridge, it would be something to see it nosing out of the reeds and mist on my own lonely river stretch.

Big seas…

laying out to the west for a week, reading Conrad and scanning the open horizon to Newfoundland. Swabbed at the airport then drive to the shore, remembered sights and feelings tumbling from the arrival-overturned vault as we surge down the lanes. I feel the tug of my own formed past when I come to this island, the experiences have been funnelled, same pink granite farmhouse where I stay, same bays and woodways, same fare of drinks and diet. It gets harder to slip your past as the sea chest you lug about grows heavier, too easy to daydream in review, looking for clues. And the virus shutdown has amplified my sense of time-paralysis, an end-of-the-tracks feeling. The past snares you in cobweb memories, you have to hack through them to cling onto the present.

I discard most of it…

keep only a few lines. I get bored of riffing, ranting, setting the scene, it gets chopped as I read through. I’m not sure you have to do that, give more than a sentence or two on the room, the face or life before. I’m drawn to the fat-trimmers, exposition and backstory all sliced, digressions guillotined. These posts are my meanderings, the story I’m trying to write is a surgical strike, sudden and jarring as a shout in the night. In, out, gone before the reader can look over their shoulder and shudder. I walk the riverways trying to lay it out in my thoughts, most of it still just out of reach, hidden behind the curtains of willows, rushes and dual-carriageway embankments. Spooked by it. My as yet unformed familiar, always at the edge of the scene.

Another lost key…

and I have to air the padlock innards to get into the shed. I enjoy the mechanics of the task, the assemblage of tools I’ve known since I was a kid, the balance of springs and catches in their lattice of forces, turn this to make that happen. The code of the universe laid bare. If only I could direct my days and months like that, pull the right levers to arrive at my envisagements. But my levers are snapped or slipped their cables it seems, there’s little progress to mark for me other than growing older. Even my pipedreams have lost their piquancy. I’ve tried nine things all shot down in flames – springs and catches in words and stories – time to hammer out the tenth.

Gone quiet…

this last week or two, the words are peeping out. I have to limp to the machine each morning – smashed my knee into a post dark-riding over the meadow –  but I’m free to wander over the keys. And I never hear the exiled blower.

I spent last week…

picking my way through the ruin of the Last of Us Part II. I wanted to know what happened to Joel and Ellie, but all the wonder’s gone, the phantom of life that made Ellie special. The developer talks of the audience experiencing the game rather than enjoying it, but I came away mourning my lost hours and the lost potential of the characters I knew from playing the first game. I picked up Factotum for some light relief, curled pages of another wanderer and his nickel beers and flophouse ravings but at least the old tramp has his dreams, a rheumy eye fixed on the stars. Then I drove over to a games shop and sold my copy of the disc, it felt good to move on.

Climb to the tower…

at Broadway, the hill dotted with picnicking Brits. The lockdown is easing. The council ticket inspectors are back doing their rounds and shops begin to open. But there’s no sense the virus is beaten and the news media continue harrying the government for its many failings, how could they do otherwise. Clausewitz friction dogs our leaders, the mishaps, mistakes, false intelligence and false starts of any live campaign are at play with the response to the virus. The ventilators we didn’t even need procurement fiasco, how much breath and twitter space was wasted on that? The desperate chase for PPE that wasn’t fit to use when it finally arrived. Schools not opening because the government didn’t reckon on recruiting tens of thousands of new teachers in a few weeks, and doubling available class space, didn’t reckon on no good will from unions and councils and didn’t have wartime powers to push the policy through. National data comparisons will mean nothing if there are second waves and outbreaks. The present is all smoke and dust, we’ll only know the truth in retrospect and that will be argued over and reinterpreted and rediscovered according to passions and partisanship. The only truth you can be sure of is what you smell and touch and witness from an arm’s length away – you have to be in the room or on the field – and even then another witness to the same event will see things you didn’t see. But we need narratives that people can live with. Stories where most agree. It’s the human design to take the terrifying immensity and uncertainty of things out of our control or knowing and shrink them to simple parables, to a few words shared when we meet a friend, a nod of the head. We crave the new normal, something we can understand. But I begin to wonder, what’s coming next? Changes that used to take decades to filter through the markets now happen in days and nation states have shown they can reshape and replace long-held values overnight. All it takes is enough people to ask.

I went to the demo…

loitered at the edge of the crowd. I’d say there were between 500 and a thousand people there but there were more coming in as I pedalled away. A girl rolling fast on a bike with her BLM cardboard placard fixed tight in her teeth. I didn’t go into the press, I’ve never been at ease in a crowd, that’s an anonymity I never revel in, not in the concert hall or the football stands. I remember looking out from the stage when I used to play and being terrified of the crowd, a wall of outstretched limbs poking out of the dark. And my cousin dragging me to the Kop when I was thirteen, the roar swelling up in waves to make the terraces shake and the air tremble. I’ve always shunned the crowd. I saw no aggro at the demo, nobody jumped up with a lasso or a wrecking bar while I was there. There was no effort to keep people distanced, though there might have been for the sit-down protest before I arrived. “Want a mask, Boss?” asked one guy, but I declined. Arrivals passed me trying to spot the statue, asking friends to point it out. Why didn’t Oriel take it down years ago – well, those in power don’t like being told what to do, even when they know it’s the right thing to do. And OPD – Oxford Personality Disorder – is rife in the colleges, a detached arsiness that gets more toxic the longer you stay in the town. They should put him in the Ashmolean. I’m no Oxford booster but I had a shock as I rode away, there were others at the fringes, other watchers in exhausted, faded, slacker garb. Other riverpath-wandering gazers that know their French gangster movies, their Gregory Corso and Huncke, their graphic novels and Coltrane, their Rashomon and their Roerich. That’s why I’m here, of course, the city of lost causes, I can’t join the crowd but I fit right in. I biked up one of the side alleys, passed by someone who was supposed to come for dinner but it’s never worked out, surprised to see he was vaping. At the next quiet turn I come across the riot police sitting and kneeling in the lane, pulling on their black tumble suits at the open doors of their transits. It’s storm-humid and they’re sweating, joking as they tug at the kit. I ride by, under the Bridge of Sighs and out of sight. Up in Summertown, two miles from the statue, there’s a corona-masked girl standing on the road divider holding a BLM sign in the air, writing so small I can only read it when I’m five feet away from her. I think of her fashioning it back in her rooms. And all the others making their signs and their plans. All these unseen moments might change this world.

Been watching the wires…

and the tv all week, like Zappa back in ’65. Not nearly enough has changed, has anything changed? Listening to Chuck D from 1986. How can it still be happening now, so brazen, so shameless. That policeman was born in the mid-70s, what culture is still at play that forged him? Been listening to Al Sharpton and who could claim he’s wrong when he says there’s a force that oppresses and holds non-white Americans down, that works against them at all turns, that never gives them an equal break, from cradle, to school, to work, to even being safe to walk the streets and live a life. And forces like it coil around this world. We can’t rely on our leaders, change is going to come from the people. Change is upon us now.