Friday, 17 May 2019

Plume


when her idle fingertip
brushed past my heart
it left a trace in the dust

when she blew the smudge off
it fell like a dandelion of stars
 

Wednesday, 15 May 2019

Fragment #129


I wish she hadn't let her silences
stroke my soul and my eyes

I wish she hadn't looked at me
as if she kissed my whole body

I wish she hadn't written those words
which now echo in my house of cards

I wish she hadn't brushed her fingertips
over my chin, my cheeks, my lips.

But she did. And now that she's gone
I wish I had been heartspoken.
 

Tuesday, 14 May 2019

Components of resilience


"Knowing trees, I understand the meaning of patience. Knowing grass, I can appreciate persistence."

Hal Borland, American author and journalist, notably for the New York Times (1900-1978) in Countryman: A Summary of Belief, 1965.
 

Blueshift


Unslain, dressing wounds I cannot see
haggard – unsure of knowing this world
just when I thought I did but again
someone unmade it
the feeling creeping back
that this unworld
unrecognisable, unfigured
untasted, ungripped
is redshifting away from me
and now, unfeeling alive,
I am unmyself
shifting to blue.
 

Monday, 13 May 2019

like mirrors


"How simple life becomes when things like mirrors are forgotten."

Daphne du Maurier, novelist (1907-1989), in Frenchman's Creek (1941).

She will


When she will realise
she can move mountains
with her green gaze

when she will realise
she's the neutron star of girls

when she finally understands
she's shaping the world
in her gentlefirm hands

when she finally understands
she's greater than the Sahara sands

when she sees at last
that she's better than us all
and her love unsurpassed

when she sees at last
the good in her contrasts

when she finds out
she's stronger than us all
the strength in her doubt

when she finds out –

she'll move mountains
and supernova our soul
she'll make rain fall
where it never rains

she will light places
we didn't know existed

she will rewrite the tale
of what it is to love
she will lift the darkest veil
on skies we only dreamt of

she will fit the universe
in the palm of her hands
cup it like a young plant
water it with a verse

and we'll all be born again.
 

Sunday, 12 May 2019

where the cliff met the sea


I set up my bed
by the break of day
I strung clouds together
wove rain as wallpaper

my bedroom was floating
on the placid ocean so
I stuffed my pillowcase
with the colours of space

with the day's sunshafts
I braided a farewell memory
One that I will keep deep down
and wait for the night to drown.

Thursday, 9 May 2019

A Poet's Advice (1958)


"Almost anybody can learn to think or believe or know, but not a single human being can be taught to feel...the moment you feel, you're nobody-but-yourself. To be nobody-but-yourself — in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else — means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight; and never stop fighting."

E.E. Cummings, American poet, essayist, playwright, painter (1894-1962)
 

Monday, 6 May 2019

I am not as I was


I am not as I was, dear flowers –

this buffeted, battered body
to whose contact you recoil
this body hooked on drips
which will not heal
was all I had to make a stand
to make myself heard
to give you birth
and to love you.
I may not be as I was,
but I give it all to you.

I am not as I was, my friends –

days drift into other days
drift again in so many ways –
unforgetting what time does –
I haven't been the best of dads
and of friends –
but please, watch over them
for the sake of what I once was.

I am not as I was, my love –

you know I wrote because I was
and you let me – checking the ties
with our daughters weren't slacking –
you were the mountain
shielding and guiding
feeding the hopes of us four –
and when I finally realised –
we silently had to unignore
the swelling in my abdomen.

I am not as I was
rings like a testament –
a raucous admittance of defeat –
forced to throw the towel –
I fight, I am fighting!

But soon I won't be any more –
leaving you my friends
to watch over my loved ones
– and you my love
to watch over our flowers –

Soon I won't be any more –
but tonight I am –
not as I was

– but I am –



“non sum qualis eram” Horace, Odes, Book 4, 1

Fragment #111


hearts ago I was a mountain
my summit so far up in the clouds
nobody would dare climb it
in fact covering an equally deep abyss
so nobody would see how empty I felt

a sigh from now I'll be an ocean
 

This is no longer home

On the train back to the old place unsure if any memory is left there Surely there must be an old cigarette burn hissing embers fusing ...