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Charles Causley - Ten Types of Hospital VisitorCharles Causley - Ten Types of Hospital Visitor
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1 The first enters wearing the neon armour Of virtue. Ceaselessly firing all-purpose smiles At everyone present She destroys hope In the breasts of the sick, Who realize instantly That they are incapable of surmounting Her ferocious goodwill. Such courage she displays In the face of human disaster! Fortunately, she does not stay long. After a speedy trip round the ward In the manner of a nineteen-thirties destroyer Showing the flag in the Mediterranean, She returns home for a week - With luck, longer - Scorched by the heat of her own worthiness. 2 The second appears, a melancholy splurge Of theological colours; Taps heavily about like a healthy vulture Distributing deep-frozen hope. The patients gaze at him cautiously. Most of them, as yet uncertain of the realities Of heaven, hell-fire, or eternal emptiness, Play for safety By accepting his attentions With just-concealed apathy, Except one old man, who cries With newly sharpened hatred, `Shove off! Shove off! `Shove… shove… shove… shove Off! Just you Shove!` 3 The third skilfully deflates his weakly smiling victim By telling him How the lobelias are doing, How many kittens the cat had, How the slate came off the scullery roof, And how no one has visited the patient for a fortnight Because everybody Had colds and feared to bring the jumpy germ Into hospital. The patient`s eyes Ice over. He is uninterested In lobelias, the cat, the slate, the germ. Flat on his back, drip-fed, his face The shade of a newly dug-up Pharaoh, Wearing his skeleton outside his skin, Yet his wits as bright as a lighted candle, He is concerned only with the here, the now, And requires to speak Of nothing but his present predicament. It is not permitted. 4 The fourth attempts to cheer His aged mother with light jokes Menacing as shell-splinters. `They`ll soon have you jumping round Like a gazelle,` he says. `Playing in the football team.` Quite undeterred by the sight of kilos Of plaster, chains, lifting-gear, A pair of lethally designed crutches, `You`ll be leap-frogging soon,` he says. `Swimming ten lengths of the baths.` At these unlikely prophecies The old lady stares fearfully At her sick, sick offspring Thinking he has lost his reason - Which, alas, seems to be the case. 5 The fifth, a giant from the fields With suit smelling of milk and hay, Shifts uneasily from one bullock foot To the other, as though to avoid Settling permanently in the antiseptic landscape. Occasionally he looses a scared glance Sideways, as though fearful of what intimacy He may blunder on, or that the walls Might suddenly close in on him. He carries flowers, held lightly in fingers The size and shape of plantains, Tenderly kisses his wife`s cheek - The brush of a child`s lips - Then balances, motionless, for thirty minutes On the thin chair. At the end of visiting time He emerges breathless, Blinking with relief, into the safe light. He does not appear to notice The dusk. 6 The sixth visitor says little, Breathes reassurance, Smiles securely. Carries no black passport of grapes And visa of chocolate. Has a clutch Of clean washing. Unobtrusively stows it In the locker; searches out more. Talks quietly to the Sister Out of sight, out of earshot, of the patient. Arrives punctually as a tide. Does not stay the whole hour. Even when she has gone The patient seems to sense her there: An upholding Presence. 7 The seventh visitor Smells of bar-room after-shave. Often finds his friend Sound asleep: whether real or feigned Is never determined. He does not mind; prowls the ward In search of second-class, lost-face patients With no visitors And who are pretending to doze Or read paperbacks. He probes relentlessly the nature Of each complaint, and is swift with such Dilutions of confidence as, `Ah! You`ll be worse Before you`re better.` Five minutes before the bell punctuates Visiting time, his friend opens an alarm-clock eye. The visitor checks his watch. Market day. The Duck and Pheasant will be still open. Courage must be refuelled. 8 The eight visitor looks infinitely More decayed, ill and infirm than any patient. His face is an expensive grey. He peers about with antediluvian eyes As though from the other end Of time. He appears to have risen from the grave To make this appearance. There is a whiff of white flowers about him; The crumpled look of a slightly used shroud. Slowly he passes the patient A bag of bullet-proof Home-made biscuits, A strong, death-dealing cake - `To have with your tea,` Or a bowl of fruit so weighty It threatens to break His glass fingers. The patient, encouraged beyond measure, Thanks him with enthusiasm, not for The oranges, the biscuits, the cake, But for the healing sight Of someone patently worse Than himself. He rounds the crisis-corner; Begins a recovery. 9 The ninth visitor is life. 10 The tenth visitor Is not usually named.
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