Snow

by Vidyan Ravinthiran

What I’m saying is, this isn’t the right kind of snow.
Sure the anchors call it treacherous
but I’ve met it down dark alleys all my life. No,
snow should always be, as kids have it, a miracle
of whiteness at the pane, flakes large enough
to plink at the glass like a moth or a fingernail

and dry out slow enough to watch drying out
on the clothing of the one you love. Forget
the ice-box favoured in the emergency room,
it’s snow like this a heart comes bedded in.
And forget those now useless runways;
planes in mid-air grow sensitive,

the riveted metal of their wings goosepimples
as they go swooping through two kinds of white.
The difference between snow and water is
the difference between dialectic and a kiss,
between a birth certificate and spare change.
This much you already know. What you don’t know

is snow, is slanted crystals
the halo round a sodium lamp
can’t bear without shuddering.
While credit shifts and melts and hardens
and is lost, as the great man says,
as water is in water, his words are merely

so many thought-bubbles made visible
as we breathe in a snowy climate:
white shapes of breath that want, like the smoke
from a cigarette, or the super-slow-mo ripples
of a cube of gelatine bounced off tile, to be
the drapes and folds of statuary. The bare

ruined choir, the coloured glass is stained
to a white radiance and goes
without remainder into water, a new beginning;
yet the snow we ball and build
into forts we’ll live in when all grown up
wants to change, always, into a white beard.

 

From Grun-tu-molani. Reproduced with kind permission from Bloodaxe Books.

Forward Prizes for Poetry

Shortlisted for Best First Collection 2014

Grun-tu-molani

Vidyan Ravinthiran

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About Vidyan Ravinthiran

Vidyan Ravinthiran (b. 1984 Leeds) was encouraged by his Sri Lankan parents to consider literature ‘a wonderful thing’. He began writing poetry by creating versions of Keats’ odes. This changed when he was given the 2002 Forward Book of Poetry by a friend of his mother. ‘I had these old-fashioned ideas about what a poem should be,’ Ravinthiran explains, ‘and I couldn’t square them with the excitements of free verse.’ In 2008, his pamphlet At Home or Nowhere was published by tall- lighthouse. He cites Yeats, Philip Larkin and Arun Kolatkar as early inspirations; Elizabeth Bishop is the subject of his doctoral thesis at Cambridge. Ravinthiran describes his collection, Grun-tu-molani, as ‘the equivalent of the Ravinthiran family Christmas. We have a roast, potatoes, stuffing, gravy, veg, but also a thousand curries… Everything you could want.’

Forward Prizes History:

  • 2019 Forward Prizes for Best Collection, shortlisted for The Million-petalled Flower of Being Here (Bloodaxe Books)

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