From ‘Debts and Lessons’ in Intimations by Zadie Smith
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Czechia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany

seen from United States
From ‘Debts and Lessons’ in Intimations by Zadie Smith
High life, 2018
Time is how you spend your love.
Nick Laird
HIGH LIFE [2018 CLAIRE DENIS]
Screenprinted Poster by Max Löffler
Light Pollution
You’re the patron saint of elsewhere,
jet-lagged and drinking apple juice,
eying, from the sixth-floor window,
a kidney-shaped swimming pool
the very shade of Hockney blue.
I know the left-hand view of life,
I think, and it’s as if I have, of late,
forgotten something in the night –
I wake alone and freezing,
still keeping to my side.
Each evening tidal night rolls in
and the atmosphere is granted
a depth of field by satellites,
the hammock moon, aircraft
sinking into Heathrow.
Above the light pollution,
among the drift of stars tonight
there might be other traffic –
migrations of heron and crane,
their spectral skeins convergent
symbols, arrows, weather systems,
white flotillas bearing steadily
towards their summer feeding.
A million flapping sheets!
Who knows how they know?
The aids to navigation might be
memory and landmarks,
or the brightest constellations.
Perhaps some iron in the blood
detects magnetic north.
I wish one carried you some token,
some Post-it note or ticket,
some particular to document
this instant of self-pity –
His Orphic Loneliness, with Dog.
Advances? None miraculous,
though the deadness of the house
will mean your coming home
may seem an anti-climax
somehow, and a trespass.
– Nick Laird
Nick Laird (Feel Free)
Feel Free by Nick Laird
To deal with all the sensational loss I like to interface with Earth. I like to do this in a number of ways. I like to feel the work I am exerting being changed,
the weight of my person refigured, and I like to hang above the ground, thus; hammocks, snorkeling, alcohol. I also like the mind to feel a kind of neutral buoyancy
and to that end I set aside a day a week, Shabbat, to not act. Having ceded independence to the sunset I will not be shaving, illuminating rooms, or raising
the temperature of food. If occasionally I like to feel the leavening of being near a much larger unnatural tension, I walk off a Sunday through the high fields
of blanket bog, saxifrage, a few thin Belted Galloways, rounding Lough Mallon to stand by the form of beauty upheld in a scrubby acre at Creggandevsky, where I do
duck and enter under a capstone mapped by rival empires of yellow feather-moss and powdery white lichen. I like then to stop, crouched, and press my back on a housing
of actual rock, coldness which lives for a while on the skin. And I like when I give you the nightfeed, Harvey, how you’re really concentrating on it: fists clenched, eyes shut, like this is bliss.
II
I like a steady disruption. I like it when the solid mantle turns to shingle and water rushes up it over and over, in love. My white-noise machine from Argos is set to Crashing Wave
but I’m not averse to the presence of numerous and minute quanta moving very fast in unison; occasions when a light wind undulates the ears of wheat, or a hessian sack of pearl-
barley seed is sliced with a pocket knife and pours. I like the way it sounds pattering on stone. I like how the starlings over Monti cohere and separate their bodies into one cyclonic
symphony, and I like that the hawk of the mind catches at their purse, pulse, caul, arc. I like the excitation passing as a shadow-ripple back and how the bag is snatched, rolls
slack; straight, falciform; mouthing; bulbing; a pumping heart. I like to interface with millions of colored pixels depicting attractive people procreating on a screen itself
dependent on rare metals mined by mud-gray children who trudge up bamboo scaffolding above a grayish-red lake of belching mud. I like how the furnace burning earth instills
in me reflexive gestures of timidity and self-pity and deference as I walk along the kinder surfaces, grass, say, or sand, unable ever to meet with my eyes the gaze of the sun.
III
I can imagine that my first and fifth marriages will be to the same human, a woman, the first marriage working well enough that we decide to try again as soon as it’s,
you know, mutually convenient. I can see that. I like the fact that we’re “supercooled star matter,” even if I can’t envisage you as anything other than warm and bleating. The thing is
I can be persuaded fairly easily to initiate immune responses by the fake safety signals of national anthems, cleavage, family photographs, country lanes, large-eyed mammals, fireworks,
the King James Bible, Nina Simone singing “The Twelfth of Never,” cave paintings, coffins, dolphins, dolmens. But I like it also when the fat impasto of the canvas gets slashed by a tourist
with a claw hammer, and a glimpse is caught of what you couldn’t say. Entanglement I like, spooky action at a distance analogizing some little thing including this long glance across the escalators
or how you know the song before you switch the station on. When a photon of light meets a half-silvered mirror and splits one meets the superposition of two, being twinned: and this repeats.
Tickling your back, Katherine, to get you to sleep, I like to lie here with my eyes closed and think of my schoolfriends’ houses, before choosing one to walk through slowly, room by sunlit room.