Tuesday 19 May 2020

Borrowed Light


Borrowed light

It’ll be dark soon and time to go.
Could you pass the dice,
I’d like another throw?
Oh, I understand.  Club rules:
Just the once, never twice.
Yes, you’ve got to be kind to be cruel.

Well, a present, long in the unwrapping
And the children like animals,
Not knowing then warping,
Bending with the truth of it;
The knowledge of an unsteady sentinel
Watching over an illness that is implicit,

With happiness a symptom that reckons a cost:
All too brief a candle,
All too much found then lost,
But a gift all the same;
One we bestow, simply, as a mantle
For the igniting and sheltering of our flame;

As if the heat carried a living debt,
Paid tomorrow so to honour us;
For what shines is a currency yet.
The moon has risen, the darkness at its back -
Its mountains shadows, its deserts dust,
With somewhere on its conquered land a flag.

And the moon, oh why is it so cold, so bright?
Such a false god robed in borrowed light.

Saturday 2 May 2020

Year of the Rat: a New Year poem for 2020





















2020

This New Year’s Eve
brings an acuity of vision,
sharp as a bat’s echo:
the birth of a decade that
might likely see me crowned dead;
the simplicity of staring ahead
into the future,
with its simple lines,
its constructed disambiguation,
its sudden benign presence,
watching the past metastasized.

Is that the clarity I dread?
Some unstained happiness
shaken out and hung on the line,
a flailing dance in the breeze
of unhindered revision -
the words to a song
that spoke of sap
rising in a tree,
that speaks with the rasp
of leaves uncurling,
of the crisp dry leaves underfoot,
the unfurling of the hand
from around the throat?

And yet,
a last intake of breath
for a leave-taking
that no longer speaks
in wheezy Chinese whispers
but with the bitter-sweet tang
of longing and laughter,
a carousel, a carousal, a recital
of drunken midnight-death happiness
from the drunk and disorderly bards
wrestling with the squared circle,
for all joys want eternity;

not without a bang,
this New Year's song was sung. 



Listen to Zhou Long here

Sunday 26 April 2020

Poetry and plagues; A Ring a Ring o' Roses ...













The Bus Driver (or the virus bred)

The bus driver drives the bus
round and around his route.
He stops at every stop,
even at request stops,
where he stops without request,
opens the doors, closes the doors,
moves on,
round and around his route;
eight hours a day,
each day, every day
round and around his route.
And no one gets on
and no one gets off.

At lunchtime
he takes a break,
he takes a breather,
carefully unwraps
the foil-wrapped sandwich
his wife has prepared and wrapped
with care: the thin sausage slices
between thin slices
of homemade bread -
ah, the simple pleasures;
and he stares out the front window
of his empty bus,
at the empty streets,
chewing slowly,
chewing it over.
He likes his job:
The routine,
the familiarity of the route,
of the people he sees - they chew the fat,
pass the time of day;
and each day just that bit different,
but reassuringly the same.
And there’s the pension:
Something to look forward to.

At the end of his shift,
he parks up at the terminal,
and he gets off and he goes home,
walking down the empty streets,
past the closed school,
the deserted square,
the shuttered houses,
the blinkered offices,
the idle factories,
the unopened shops,
the forsaken restaurant,
the unpeopled bus stops,
the locked church
(though every day is a Sunday now)
enjoying the unseasonable sun,
the unexpected peace and quiet,
unexamined and knowing nothing,
just being, unessential,
he breathes the air,
just thinking of his dinner –
it’s come to that.

At home,
he kisses his wife,
kisses his kids.
They eat a frugal supper;
he passes the salt,
passes the bread ...
they share a glass of wine.

He says his prayers.
He says goodnight.

He dreams:
There is no air in his bus,
not even enough to scream;
and he is no longer the bus driver,
he’s only a passenger,
the lone passenger,
looking out of the back window
as the bus moves forwards,
and everyone is waving
as he goes round and around the route,
up the hill and down the hill,
to and fro, back and forth,
and everyone is waving
as he goes around, comes around

endlessly 


A comment?

Saturday 25 April 2020

Looking backwards, a poem, a rant



Rant

Hindsight is a curse, heaping its miserable
I-told-you-so crumbs onto the empty platter:
The dry leftovers of an apocryphal life –
An inedible and an immoveable feast,
Beyond the cutlery of invective and prayer.

And what we now know?  The leg irons
Of a slaver’s ship that rub raw at the present;
The back-breaking day after day taking us nowhere
But to the future, with its inevitable failure -
A foresight so cheap it beggars belief.

And what god is this to listen to
Such puling disaffection? Cloth-eared
And cloth-capped, relentlessly pushing his bike
Up the hill so we can freewheel it back
Down into the valley of shadows, jeering.

What a broken toy it is to toy with us so:
The not knowing, then knowing; and how
You have to pass it on, this hand-me down
Life, this second-hand go!  It’s all torn 

And holed! 
                    Yet, it will smother your beauty.

Forgive me,
                      forgive me,
                                           forgive me.    


Thursday 26 March 2020

A poem on Loss and Grief



















Grief


His palette holds mostly black now,
With shades of grey
On the periphery;
The taste of dust in his mouth.

He sits quietly before a canvas
Bereft of colour,
It’s whiteness sour.
His eyes are marked with ash.

His memory silently denies him;
Belief peters out.
The candle gutters;
She was his blue red yellow flame.


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Friday 13 March 2020

Here, here, a music inspired poem


Here

It’s just past midnight
And the dogs are barking,
Tethered and caged.
I stop writing to listen.
One sets off a chain,
An antiphonal chorus,
The same doggy message
Of desire and disappointment
Reaching across Europe,
Skipping the chill waves
To fetch up on the frigid
Shores of England, then
Disappearing inland.

I can hear a train.
It churns the dark sky,
Roiling the turbid clouds,
Like soup simmering
And then boiling over;
Its rhythm clamouring,
The noise thick in the air
Like a smell - cloying,
Greasy with hope,
Mechanical yet animal
In flavour.
I stop writing to listen,
My pen hovering …
It’s passing through,
People travelling
To ticketed destinations,
To faraway places.

On the radio,
The Szymanowski Quartet
Is building up momentum too,
In Elena Kats-Cherin’s For Rosa.
I close my eyes and swoon,
Carried along,
Swept downstream
By lullaby and dream,
Crossing borders, continents,
And cultures … until
The final soft braking of a violin
Brings us to a halt … a full stop

Here.


I first heard this piece on the BBC World Service, played by the Szymanowski Quartet.  However, I couldn't find their rendition on the internet, nor, when I contacted their website, could they provide me with a link.  You'll notice the title has changed, but it's essentially the same song, a lovely piece.


Click to listen


Click to read

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Saturday 7 March 2020

There, there Dvořák's New World Symphony, a poem
















Epiphany

On the radio, where music has been unspooling uselessly,
I recognize the pan of Dvořák’s camera across the galaxy,
Its slow zoom onto something small – it could be me.

Pushing aside the insidious connection with the Hovis advertisement
(brown bread – dead), I soar; largo: a slow, broad, dignified treatment.
There’s an elsewhere here too: Bieszczady, a prickling sentiment.

Under a night’s vast sky, the crouched, looming mass of trees
huddled; shuffling together around the lake, brought to their knees,
They whispered dark prayers, a confessional sifting of leaves.

I am old technology and my tape player whirred and stuttered
The New World Symphony, from the Proms; a candle guttered
With the breeze rising up from the shore, a promise uttered

In an inflated currency.  The wooden cabin creaked like a ship
And I gripped the handrail of the veranda, leaning against the tip
Of sky and sea, of stars and planets, feeling suddenly adrift

High above the lake, with its glittering slick of moonlight;
The music sublime.  Then there are those moments, those slight
Pauses: the meaning is in the waiting: a sudden grasp, then the slide …

I picked up my bottle and followed a path to the lake side,
Stumbling through the trees and over roots - the pauses held
Inside.  I sat on a rock close to the water’s edge, still thrilled

By the light of Armstrong’s moon, its near reflection broken into timid
Splinters, trembling just beneath the surface, the water brimming
At my feet, somniloquent and restive.  I heard the doleful lowing

Of a distant cow, the closer engine hum of a frogs’ chorus revving
In the autumnal air (though still August), the gulp of a fish surfacing.
I listened to the dark radio of the lake with its glowing

Points of stations broadcasting tinny music and frail human voices,
Snatches of songs, laughter, across its caliginous breadth, noises
Keeping loneliness at bay; still I held on tightly to the pauses:

Wide open spaces big enough to begin a whole world, a whole new world,
Yet small enough to live in, to be a part of.  In the beginning was the word …       
If I could hear it … but the pauses lengthened, became silence, emptiness, a void.


Suddenly filled with it - weightlessness: a transparency holding light.  “Here I am!”
Nothing but the echo of my voice travelling towards me, away, across space and time,
The trees lifting their heads, wringing their hands at the soft urging of the water’s solipsism.

It was a conundrum, an anagram.  In answer, a dog barked backwards across the lake.
A dog in the manger!  A dog’s dinner!  I hurled my empty bottle into the black
Water and clambered back up the hill to open another: I had a thirst to slake.

So a memory is fashioned to furnish a life, to adorn its dark corners: a threadbare
Sentimentality that makes it feel lived in, like home.  And to know now that it’s not where
Or when or if or how; and there’s no what or why to release a breath held – a pause –


In a life’s prayer:  No elsewhere, but here.







Click on the link to listen to the second movement of New World Symphony:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pHyN3izk38c


Silence ... pauses ... comment?