Skip to content | Skip
to main menu | Skip to current section menu | Best Scottish Poems home page | Accessibility
![]() |
![]() |
seductive bright light
of
the evening narrative
ease of habit
the
need to relax
heck
we
all need a break
so it goes
day
into night
something to talk about
social
cohesion
*
which is entertainment
which
is value
which is passing time
which
is bonding
movement on the retina
movement
in the brain
reinforcement
which
is
processed information
spectator
dialogue
plasma brother
*
privileged
by
bombs
we
occupy
the dominant narrative
for subjects
far away
who may envy us
if seen
on their screen
From Markings 26 (2008). With permission of the poet.
Big Brother was a Stalinesque figure mouthing "propaganda" on a square screen. Now it's a wide, in-every-home plasma screen, with Mr and Mrs Newscaster standing easily, or sitting side by side chatting to camera, or occasionally between themselves. Chatting with mannered but wide-eyed engagement in "the" rolling 24x7 "news". News that never contradicts government foreign policy—which is to say nowadays, all-party policy: which is to say NATO policy, which is to say American government policy, which is to say European Union policy. There is an agreed narrative: it is "common sense".
It is worth looking at sometimes to find out who this week's "monster" is. Mugabe? Beijing? Karadzik? Putin? They are not part of "our" society, that society which bonds newscaster and watcher. It is not a propagandist stance, of course. It is not hectoring. It is easy-mannered, smart-casual, nothing hot-headed.
And always, out of sight of camera, the unseen narrative of the arms industry, maintaining what is called "the balance of power".
Let's watch the news. One never feels one's day is complete unless one finds out what today's news is. It's like opening the window of a morning, and seeing the world in its usual place.
So used have we become to Tom Leonard writing in phonetic Glaswegian it's easy to overlook how at ease he is - as he is here - in standard English. Few writers are more political than he and Plasma Nights is as political as it gets. On the face of it, television is a benign presence in our lives, a commonplace relaxant that gives us communally "something to talk about". After the first, deliberately soporific stanza, Leonard quickens the pace, as if jolting us into sensibility. By the final stanza the "evening narrative" has become the "dominant" one and every syllable is an ironic landmine.
Tom Leonard was born in Glasgow in 1944. His publications include Intimate Voices which contains his poetry 1965-1983; access to the silence which has the poetry 1984-2004; Places of the Mind, a biography of James Thomson ("B.V.") author of the poem 'The City of Dreadful Night'; and an edited anthology Radical Renfrew, a collection of mainly hitherto out-of-print nineteenth century Scottish poetry.
Tom Leonard's new and selected poems Outside the Narrative is due late 2008.