The great asylums of Scotland, cloistered
like the proud abbeys we tore down brick
by brick. Yet harder to love. They docked
at the edge of our towns like relations
with whom we felt ill at ease. Ones who kept
themselves to themselves. Their farms. Their laundries.
Their water supplies. We stand in their portals,
our eyes drawn down the tree-lined avenues
to the prospect of distant hills. Country houses?
Hydros? Oh, what shall we do with them? –
the great asylums of Scotland, still with us,
as keen to serve as the day they were built.
A fleet for their time they set out, freighted
with hope and grand design. Look at them now,
scuttled on the ocean floor. Light floods them.
Along their corridors, doors flap open
on empty cabins with nothing to hide.
In attic rooms the sky's light pours over
a tide-wrack of maps, plans, records – a grid
to lay over a waste of rage, grief, anger
and pain. None of that will make a cairn.
In these, the great asylums of Scotland,
always it is evening about to fall.
The heavy doors are closing in on us all.
and the counting begins. But coming through
the frayed web of darkness are slants of light:
greenness, firstness, hope. What is to be done
with a two-faced legacy such as this?
Multi-occupancy – that's the answer!
Flatpacks to the gentlemen's quarters,
IKEA to the boardrooms. Four by fours
draw up before the great asylums now.
They're made for them, framed by chestnut trees,
like adverts. Inside the auction hall –
the stillness of graveyards, the discretion
of private affairs. Oh how beautiful
are the crafted dovetailes in the wardrobes
no one wants. They sulk like small monuments
history has ignored. So much gloom.
‘I wouldn't want any of it in my house,’
someone says. ‘Not knowing where it's come from.’
As if objects soak up instability
like nicotine. If so, not only so –
for writing up the staircase in Crichton Hall
are oak leaves, carved not by craftsmen from Antwerp,
but by men traipsing over winter fields
from Dalton using a water pipe as guide.
Run your hands over the leaves and you'll feel
their approval for their new asylum.
Though of the mad, little could be salvaged –
not one knitted pullover, not one apron –
for these craftsmen, the trade in lunacy
was a godsend. The melancholy we mourn
they transfromed into bread, milk, sunlight.
Tom Pow was writer in residence at the Edinburgh International Book Festival 2001–2003 and poet in residence at StAnza, Scotland's poetry festival. He is senior lecturer at Glasgow University, Crichton Campus, Dumfries. This poem is from his collection Dear Alice – Narratives of Madness (Salt, 2008), a poetic response to the Crichton Royal, Dumfries. Reproduced with permission from Salt Publishing Limited. © Tom Pow Chosen by Femi Oyebode.
eLetters
No eLetters have been published for this article.