Monday, 23 July 2018
Known turbulences
"Writing poetry is the art of predicting where lightning will strike. Reading poetry is akin to stepping into a thunderstorm."
Me, teacher, writer (1979-)
Monday, 16 July 2018
The bee
Grandpa waved and waved
his arms
as if the libeccio in a
fit of madness
had turned him into a
scarecrow.
The afternoon was still
and breathless,
not a snort of wind, not a
thread of cloud.
It was a bee which Grandpa
was franctically after.
It first buzzed about the
table
when Granny brought the
melon;
it reappeared from
somewhere
when it smelt the grilled
sirloin.
By cheesetime Grandpa was
so red
that he grabbed his empty
glass and
in one swift motion
belljarred the bee in.
It was as surprised as any
of us,
banging on the
lightletting walls.
Wine trickled down and
formed
a circle of red on the
sunstained
plastic cover. All were
amused but I,
I couldn't take my eyes
off the scene,
the tragedy wrought in a
second.
The cutglass patterns drew
crosses of light which
seemed
to dazzle the insect.
After a long while it grew
tired,
or it fell into the purple
ring;
it drank or perhaps
drowned,
tittered, its wings
jerking slowly
refused to carry it
further, or perhaps
they had crushed on the
glass.
The bee circled the rim,
sensing air maybe,
its antennae erratic, its
head rocking;
perhaps still drinking, or
choking
on the spirits trapped
inside.
It remained motionless for
a while.
Grandpa lifted his glass
and filled it,
gulped half of it, his
eyes on the bee.
Watching the bee, which
lay here,
unmoving, playing dead I
hoped.
I had also hoped it had
left its sting
so that Grandpa would
gobble it down.
Neither of these things
were happening.
I looked up and saw him
observe me.
Perhaps he had been
watching me all along.
He took a paper napkin,
scooped up
the dead bee with an
unbrutal motion
of his gigantic hand,
walked
in the scorching summer
sun
to the patch of verbena,
dug a small trench,
dropped the bee in.
When he sat back down
only the disturbed
flowerbed
and the circle of red
bore proof that anything
had ever happened here.
Friday, 13 July 2018
Dismembered
"We now know that memories are not fixed or frozen, like Proust's jars of preserves in a larder, but are transformed, disassembled, reassembled, and recategorized with every act of recollection."
in Hallucinations (2012), Oliver Sacks, neurologist and writer (1933-2015)
Thursday, 12 July 2018
Tinder is the night
Tu voulais pourtant le swiper à gauche
mais ton pouce était semble-t-il
bourré.
Le mec te parle et putain qu'il est
moche !
Dans quel pétrin tu t'es encore
fourrée ?
Tu voulais celui d'avant, ou d'après,
d'autant que celui-là a l'air bien
cloche.
Tu comprends pas comment tu t'es
gourée,
même pas en rêve, c'est mort, grave
il se touche.
Moins tu réponds et plus le mec
s'accroche,
c'est tout toi de tomber sur un taré,
il a du croire que c'était dans la
poche,
désolée mec, j'en ai rien à carrer.
Bordel, qu'est-ce qu'il attend pour se
barrer ?
Il croit qu'il va se vider les
baloches ?
C'est ta faute mais t'es pas
désespérée.
Tu les sens venir bientôt, les
reproches.
Tu rêves ou le type tente une autre
approche ?
Il est teubé ou il le fait exprès ?
Il croit que je suis la mère de ses
mioches...
Bon, OK mec, tu m'as bien fait marrer
mais il est grand temps de me
supprimer,
je suis pas une fille pour toi donc
décroche....
j'aurai toujours aqua-poney en soirée.
J'aurai toujours autre chose à faire :
cinoche
course à pied, ou me coller une
taloche.
Tu sais, ça nous arrive de s'égarer
mais mec on n'est pas que de la
bidoche,
faut parler avant de s'énamourer.
Alors toi t'apprends à liker à gauche
et moi j'apprends à ne pas me gourer,
comme ça personne ne loupe le coche,
chacun de son côté pour mieux se
marrer.Wednesday, 11 July 2018
Tuesday, 10 July 2018
The constant hater
For some people hate is formol for the
soul,
it keeps their blood flowing at a sure
rate,
their death is postponed because they
are cruel –
prolonging their life by prolonging
their hate –
oft it's the last option available.
Great-grandma would have died decades
ago
had she not hated us with all her guts,
slyly stoking her rage for it to glow –
loathing more familiar because love
hurts –
but hating needs constant care lest it
rusts.
Bitter as could be great-grandma hates
on
but now she wants help to sleep the
long sleep,
so when she finally asks her
great-grandson
he ignores the kind plea and blames the
grippe –
leaves her muttering to herself, alone.
Monday, 9 July 2018
Wednesday, 4 July 2018
Tuesday, 3 July 2018
Toes in the sand
A good few things started
and ended here –
mom's ashes were dispersed
in that same sea
which saw me almost
drowning years later –
this is where I come back
when I'm lonely.
A girl here guided my hand
to her crotch,
another taught me all I
know about fear,
life oft waited here to go
up a notch –
a good few things ended
and started here.
I learnt some
relationships had a price –
a good few things ended
forever here –
that journeys are more
precious than their prize
for you can lose it yet
still walk the pier.
Inherited things lay here
unwanted
for I began to write
before I came –
for here indeed a good few
things started –
every time different,
every time the same.
The ships still pass in
the Bay of Biscay –
tireless winds churning
sands, seas and thoughts –
a good few things were
born or in decay,
here where clamour still
the battles once fought.
Here my yesterdays and
tomorrows blend –
suns set with rage and
kind moons disappear –
aroused and alert looking
for the rend –
perhaps all things are
bound to happen here.Wednesday, 27 June 2018
Couldn't be any more relevant than now
“Every war when it comes, or before it comes, is represented not as a war but as an act of self-defense against a homicidal maniac. In our time political speech and writing are largely the defense of the indefensible. But if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought. All the war-propaganda, all the screaming and lies and hatred, comes invariably from people who are not fighting. Political language...is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidarity to pure wind. War against a foreign country only happens when the moneyed classes think they are going to profit from it. Nationalism is power hunger tempered by self-deception. War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength. (On the manipulation of language for political ends.) We have now sunk to a depth at which restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men. If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear. In times of universal deceit, telling the truth will be a revolutionary act.”
George Orwell (1903-1950), Facing Unpleasant Facts: Narrative Essays (Edited by George Packer, 2008)
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