Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
NIGHT THOUGHTS
Somewhere in the
middle of the night you wake up.
Is it bad
digestion? The need to relieve yourself? A nightmare? An over-charged mind,
which keeps telling you that you have some duty to perform? An over-stimulated
imagination? All of these things or none of them?
Anyway, the fact
is that you wake up in the middle of the night, and you cannot go back to
sleep.
It is pitch
black. The street lamps have long since been put out. Your village is far from
any other.
You lie there in
the dark for a while, thinking and wishing you could go back to sleep. But you
can’t.
You pray.
It doesn’t help.
You light the
candle you keep near your bed. You try to read. Your mind will not focus. You
keep getting distracted by the shadows the candle throws on the walls and
ceiling. Your mind works on them fantastically. You relate them to the odd
creaks you can hear in other parts of the house. It is easy to imagine ghosts.
It is easy to imagine some night creature hiding in the dark.
“This will never do,” you think. “I will use my Reason. I will get up and face
the night.”
Taking your
lighted candle, you move into your study. You pull aside the thick drapes, draw
your chair to the window and blow out the candle. You let your eyes adjust. It
is not pitch black after all. It is night’s particular kingdom. There is a lean
crescent moon low on the horizon. There is no wind. The sky is clear. There
are many stars. They move slowly, but they move. You sit there long enough to
see a constellation rise and establish itself over a tree. It is completely
silent – except for a sheep’s bleat from a near field, and once the incongruous
squawk of a night bird.
You become
acquainted with the night. You listen to its silence. You know its physical
presence. It is at your elbow. You think night thoughts. The world of day is
far away. You rise to this other enfolding reality. Night, the silent witness,
the silent watcher, the other world, the other reality. Silence and starlight
and you communing with them.
* *
* * *
* * *
* * *
* * *
* * *
* * *
Somewhere in the
middle of the night you wake up.
Is it bad
digestion? The need to relieve yourself? A nightmare? An over-charged mind,
which keeps telling you that you have some duty to perform? An over-stimulated
imagination? All of these things or none of them?
Anyway, the fact
is that you wake up in the middle of the night, and you cannot go back to
sleep.
“Bugger”, you say, as you want your sleep
and you know you will be unduly grumpy and tired when afternoon comes.
The orange light
of the nearby city hangs over your suburb and penetrates your bedroom curtains.
The streetlights are on all night. There is never real darkness. There is never
real quiet, either. Every so often a car hushes past. There is the distant hum
of a motorway. Be grateful for small mercies, though. At least it is quieter
than at full day.
You go into your
study and pull aside the drapes. Moon, stars, but too much light pollution here
to see many of them. They are notional.
Reading is not
an option. Your mind is too unfocused, too tired.
You wake up the
computer. You check your e-mails. Touts, publicity, free offers. You delete
most of them. You check out Facebook. Trivia, chatter, holiday snaps, gossip.
You’ve had enough. You watch the BBC news on live feed. A scandal. A political shuffle.
Terrorism. Deaths. An air crash. A piece of showbiz puffery. The world moves.
It is always day
somewhere. It’s always day here in your study. Day can’t be turned off.
We have killed
the night. We have killed night thoughts.
You write a poem
about it.
THE
SWITCH
i
The old parish
stretching
from candle to
candle
in bucolic
darkness
had Death walk
its acres
to gather its
children
in uncured
diseases.
The physick
they fed then,
the
leeching, bloodletting
stocked
churchyards with corpses.
Death was a
companion
familiar as
toothache
and scrofulous
ague.
And after
Death, Judgement
when Night
Thoughts were mortal
and ghosts
walked the copses.
ii
Digestion
ruined by small beer,
the cotter
falls down on rammed earth
at 2 a.m. in
penitence
to ask God’s
mercy on his soul.
A nightmare
spiked him in the dark.
The Devil
leered from unmown fields.
Sin was a snake
spilling its seed
from pouches
like his itching crotch.
Up in the
parqueted vicarage
the parson’s
wife groans in her sleep.
Her husband’s
left the bed again
to force Church
Fathers in his skull.
Jerome,
Aquinas, Chrysostom
console him for
his poor degree
and ease his
pain by candlelight
when nightmares
touch his heart with fear.
And nearer
dawn, when fear’s subdued,
he turns to
Moderns for relief -
Joseph Butler
or Tillotson
to help him
turn a polished phrase.
His sermons are
all curative.
Their urbane
chat takes him from where
pure evil is a
tactile force
and something’s
moving in the dark.
iii
Who cares for
nightmares now? At 2 a.m.
a law of
physics is the creaking wood,
the shifting
tiles, a pusscat on the prowl
and voices,
partygoers going home.
Graves never
yawn. The dead lie still and rot.
Ghosts are
engravings in foxed storybooks
and childhood’s
monster underneath the bed
is promptly
killed by flicking a light switch.
Why stress on
Death? Kill headaches with a pill.
There’s nothing
fruitful that can compete with
the all-night
telecast and foreign news.
Night Thoughts
are nerve ends. Please go back to sleep.
(From the collection The Little Enemy, published by Steele
Roberts, 2011)
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