Paul Bailey
Flights of Fancy
Soho
By Richard Scott
Faber & Faber 78pp £10.99
Asylum
By Sean Borodale
Jonathan Cape 63pp £10
Enter, Fleeing
By Mark Ford
Faber & Faber 63pp £10.99
While reading the poems in Soho, Richard Scott’s outstanding first collection, I was reminded of a conversation the young Peter Hall had with Edith Sitwell on a television arts programme some sixty years ago. When the newly famous director asserted that good poets could write about anything they chose to, the bejewelled Dame Edith, who was dolled up in full medieval gear, snorted with disdain. Poetry, she pronounced, should only concern itself with noble matters. At around the time of this pronouncement, Thom Gunn wrote a poem celebrating the fact that he had recently caught crabs (of the kind that attach themselves to the pubic regions). And now here is Richard Scott recalling the ‘ripe fullness’ of a butt plug. To someone of my age, it seems only yesterday that Cavafy was admiring a boy’s reflection in a tobacco shop window.
Apart from the scientific terms for the bacteria that find a home in or near urinals, Scott’s vocabulary – often inventively employed – is instantly familiar. This is how he describes the regulars in ‘Public Toilets in Regent’s Park’:
All for the thrill of placing their knees
on the piss-stained cold, the iris shimmering
behind a hand-carved glory hole,
a beautiful cock unfolding like a swan’s neck
from the Harris Tweed of a city gent’s suit
In another poem, ‘cover-boys’, written in lower case, he tells the life stories of the three youths who grace the cover of LATIN INCHES, a gay porno magazine that’s been hidden behind various copies of RAZZLE on a newsagent’s top shelf for an uninspected nine years. Scott’s account
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