The lantern outlined your pockmarked face,
watchman who survived far more than thieves.
Even the darkness shivered with fright.
The lantern outlined your pockmarked face,
watchman who survived far more than thieves.
Even the darkness shivered with fright.
In a fingersnap
with snipersharp
accuracy
you tore through my heart
ghost, soul and bones
when you laughed
when I said
I love you
.
The night had been long, the night had been short
burning up the last of the last wick
pantomiming my way home after work –
the day had been longer than eternity
and I moving like a rattling bag of bones
The night was long and the night was short
intoxicated by the smell of her skin –
lost in the hours of her lap
the day inevitably whorled away
but I was to be stilled again
The night is long, and the night is short
moments like meteors for an attentive mind
scrutinising emotions encased in seconds
in curled strands of hair and wringing hands –
having to inhabit stillness in motion
The night will be long and short –
full of words that pinch and twist the heart
each breath a farewell to love and time
with only smells like petrichor to keep sane
and spoken words echoing like footsteps
I spent my youth under vast blue domes
the cerulean so heavy it was suffocating
lying down it felt like a lid sealing shut.
Trees whispered cryptic, leaf-and-sun songs
power lines seesawing across the car’s window
also sang when the mistral blew the laundry dry.
And the hawks, the hawks,
flickering through the clouds
their cry pinning souls in the heat.
Blond locks of hair turned crimson in the dusk
the fateful petrichor in the black autan, pungent,
time was as unending and volatile as space.
Such expanse overpowered every sense
lightning-jolted the heart to the origin
like those summer storms I loved so much.
And the hawks, always watchful, on the prowl,
scourge of the infinite, parched fields
when the driest acorns pulverised underfoot.
In the warm embrace of the night I sank
built the cities and lands in which I grew
stillness sought in motion to gain peace.
The day, sunlit tiles framed by a window,
crystallizing specks of dust in sunshafts
church bells unringing the flock to work.
I spent my youth under vast blue domes
pretending I was an unfettered hawk
against an immense, blueing eye
Right above the surface of the sun
disaware of pain, despair and joy
floating, floating, floating in a blue dome.
countless year-long days past since she went
every memory of her flared from under the bed
in a lock of hair balled up in dust
This place is a shelter
wind-battered
snow-congealed
lava-covered
but a shelter
– seas crashing on soul
gashing the littoral –
– clouds so low
one with the froth –
– rumbling geysers
quieting volcanoes –
black sands upon grey stones
steel sea neath pearly frost –
few dare live where the ground splits
where winter winds wuther the mind –
but if they brave the elements
this place becomes their shelter
this uncompromising land
is all they need and have
this is home for the lost, the weary,
the orphaned and the widow/er
– no question asked and left
but where the glacier goes
those who find this place hospitable
have seething magma in their veins
burn with an impetuous fire within
their love like a Lichtenberg figure
thriving where life is scarce because
wind-battered
snow-congealed
lava-covered
yet they found a shelter in this place
The long and short of it lasted more so
than anything she'd seen, and it left her
– panting – sweating – and looking up at him –
both still slightly discombobulated –
When are we supposed to reach
the age at which our rest is due?
We are tired
– tired of looking after others,
our elders and youngers –
– the first bailing out as soon as possible –
– the second deferring for as long as they can –
We are left with the toil and the sweat,
the emptiness of our feelings and of our lives
– the very subject of the shows we watch –
We are tired of stretching ourselves
across such vast distances,
our minds numbed with pain
and impossible tasks.
We long to rest – perhaps even
waste our lives, unoccupied,
unaccompanied, slothful –
for the prospects of being too frail and sick
to be able to rest when our work is done
– out of breath and having achieved little –
– unable or unwilling to have sex, do sports –
– life suddenly just a distraction,
death the justification –
– and endpoint:
bedridden, committed, parked and underfed:
how could we escape this middle-class death,
we ask you – the answer more deafening
than the fucking Big Bang
– and we’re expected to go down
with a barely-heard whimper –
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 ...