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gareth-spark
gareth-spark
Gareth Spark was born in Whitby He began writing the poems that became his first collection, "At the breakwater" (Mudfog Press, 2001) in the late 90's. His second collection "Ram raid" (Skrev Press, 2004) was a critical success. In 2005, he moved to Spain, where he began to write his third collection "Rain in a dry land" (Mudfog Press, 2008), while working in various bars .His short fiction and poetry appeared in Shotgun Honey, Line Zero, Ink, sweat and tears, Out of the Gutter, NAP, Poetry Bus and Deepwater Literary Review, among others. His story "American Tan" won second place in the GKBC International Short Story competition in 2013. The publication of his first collection of stories "Snake Farm" (Electraglade Press, 2015) followed. He reviews poetry online for Fjords Review, among others, and is a member of the Zelmer Pulp writing collective.
In the salted corner of the square, A small glass door opened to watery air; I glanced down there throughout siesta, Anxious at the root of a dry tongue For wine squeezed from the ochre hills Behind Cambrils, she sold in empty Water bottles, a Euro for a litre. I hurried down through the Casa Gallau, Quickly as my sunburn would allow; Dove into light as though onto hot sand, Around cars that sounded like fire fights, Squinting in the peppered, robust sun And in - the old woman waiting, “Adeu!” Then back upstairs, but slower now: To watch TV in Catalan; to face A frying pan balcony; to get drunk and think of rain.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 11:52 AM UTC
The Riojano
Fall Crows dropped from the sky as though they were cinders falling from the hot breath of some dark fire; The wind was pepper and grit ripped from the coalyard and the rust of an old truck. The remonstrance of dead things filled the day so much that I grieved a little for the sun's doomed grace; and hated the way an arrow sharp and tin-tasting season made me think of you.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:18 AM UTC
Fall
Caught in the wet gale torn between the hill's teeth like a final breath, Corduroy cold against sky and skin, And the ashes of a fire you thought would always Burn, left now in the damp and no stars No anything but the vague sense of something Running after you like a dog you want to leave behind; But forgetting always the loss The light fading on stone The eyes you no longer remember and the voice you no longer hear Except as an echo of your own Caught in the coral cave of dreams that come after Too much drink and worry and work and too many Years. Walking through dust wet with frost, cars slicing by, And this is all there is, this fading. This fading.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:15 AM UTC
Fading
The barmaid in El Capi explained How to get to the Roman Villa: Across the tracks, past hotels like broken teeth nibbling ***** yellow air; Along the loose beach to the far side Of a river’s still but singing mouth, where A riot of frogs clicked in the reeds Beneath a trampling green heat. We dragged down there one Saturday, Belly’s empty of all but beer. You wore damp grey denim and were afraid To be seen beside the señoras; Your pallor lurked behind blushed hair Brushed forward across your face, And you complained because You could not breathe and I Was looking at women on the way. But you would not remember this day Now if I were to ask, nor any Day - so why do I? When we stood and listened to frogs that, like you, seek heat To lay upon a cold heart.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:13 AM UTC
The frogs you won't remember
We took the weight off below the pine On the cool wood of a bench curled around its rough trunk. Red dust drifted from the road in clouds, Like spectres from a battlefield, And the air above had blanched In a shrill high noon intensity. Sweat escaped my face Like weeping- The rules of the race had changed And we two could run no more. All around was the sound of a child Crying and calling in Catalan To its copper-eyed mother as she smoked a cigarette. We did not speak. Between a creak in the branches And the aromas of flowers and feet; we had nothing left, Not even the sunlight.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:11 AM UTC
The great pine
Ball of bone and feather in the dew, I surprised you when I pushed the door For first smoke of the day; The glass air, cracked beneath your wing As you hopped onto a wet fence to sing. And I, without the least music, Breathed poison against the morning’s blue wall.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:08 AM UTC
Songbird on my doorstep
These songs Were loud last when you were fast In my days like water in its bed: Molten light, wood smoke banks, promise that horizons stand, a far off blue-salt heaven. I do not know if I owe thanks For the ache of this recall, rushing in tides Across the cracked mud and dross of Channels that have for years been dry And which the next hot noon will drain. I do not know, but I shall refrain From turning.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:06 AM UTC
Blue Salt Heaven
A hundred years of the dead; The new stones, pale as the morning’s bread And those further back, that crowd below A deep green shudder of the trees- Family whose faces we never knew, The old ones, in pieces, beneath the yew. They linger alike at the edge of the shore Where the world of figures and fights washes to sand; Where bad dreams are not things we wake from, Perhaps, And the second hand can never rush The morning to your side. So, they reside: And I part the blades that shroud a stone Thinking, for a second, I’d seen your name.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:05 AM UTC
Helredale Road Cemetary
To be allowed to drive forever, through the burns Of August, pregnant with a dreaming, Set upon another life. To drive and not climb from the car, with every Window wound back into its shell, to not Think ever of heaven, and never to tell Pedestrians of the driving. To be in transit: to be a wing, awake In smaller shelves of air; to live As though each moment were its own movie Screen And never to regret the faces standing still, The roadside eyes, the strangers fleeting; Each foretells a story. To touch potential that reminds And shout "Never mind!" as one drives. To bring beneath the hot blue A mode of being mindful Of the lachrimae rerum, and to feel The sorrow and the thrill of speed. To never feel the need of feet, And to watch Clouds through tinted glass and country turn to run As you blink against the sun and throw Your glasses from the car. To find a country lane, and race So close to bracken that the dew Can wash your face, and then slow, By the heated science fiction of a petrol station In the grip of yellow weather. To press the horn and be at last born Into the endlessness of sky. To cherish evening as time when seeing nothing Dies; To exceed day and to say "Hello," to women at the roadside. To see the world as something flying, Something outshining the hazy study walking Teaches. To know you drive beyond the reaches And to give it everything you've got As you lean into the wheel and feel A sainthood in your suntan, A miracle in the mileage. To ignore maps, and head for places Beyond the slightest traces of your former life, Abandoning self in the process of speed And accept adventures and sudden brakes Because you feel the car outwaiting patience by the road, And you are owed some living, **** it! To never check the rear-view mirror and to slow down as the sun collapses Worn out on the hills, Because you never will exhaust The depths and wonders of this prayer. To never care about direction, and to drive Into the night With headlights blessing every pebble; To smell the fuel and feel the wheel and Drive throughout forever.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:02 AM UTC
Driving as a form of prayer.
To be allowed to drive forever, through the burns Of August, pregnant with a dreaming, Set upon another life. To drive and not climb from the car, with every Window wound back into its shell, to not Think ever of heaven, and never to tell Pedestrians of the driving. To be in transit: to be a wing, awake In smaller shelves of air; to live As though each moment were its own movie Screen And never to regret the faces standing still, The roadside eyes, the strangers fleeting; Each foretells a story. To touch potential that reminds And shout "Never mind!" as one drives. To bring beneath the hot blue A mode of being mindful Of the lachrimae rerum, and to feel The sorrow and the thrill of speed. To never feel the need of feet, And to watch Clouds through tinted glass and country turn to run As you blink against the sun and throw Your glasses from the car. To find a country lane, and race So close to bracken that the dew Can wash your face, and then slow, By the heated science fiction of a petrol station In the grip of yellow weather. To press the horn and be at last born Into the endlessness of sky. To cherish evening as time when seeing nothing Dies; To exceed day and to say "Hello," to women at the roadside. To see the world as something flying, Something outshining the hazy study walking Teaches. To know you drive beyond the reaches And to give it everything you've got As you lean into the wheel and feel A sainthood in your suntan, A miracle in the mileage. To ignore maps, and head for places Beyond the slightest traces of your former life, Abandoning self in the process of speed And accept adventures and sudden brakes Because you feel the car outwaiting patience by the road, And you are owed some living, **** it! To never check the rear-view mirror and to slow down as the sun collapses Worn out on the hills, Because you never will exhaust The depths and wonders of this prayer. To never care about direction, and to drive Into the night With headlights blessing every pebble; To smell the fuel and feel the wheel and Drive throughout forever.
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I finished work and waited for her With a cigarette, watching an African try to sell sunglasses to sleeping Irish tourists; The light was a million needles against my neck And my beer damp work trousers were patterned by pale sand blown from the beach. She walked towards me from the shore; Her rusty hair writhed in the sea’s laconic breeze, And I heard blood beneath the waves, and the mountains, Falling blue to the white waters, seemed to pant beneath The sun’s arms, And I felt I could fall too, Like the sun, Like the word, Like the mountain’s peaks. She paused and watched me, her arms filled with bags From Suma, and her gaze empty As a breath designed to hold a name. Cap Salou cracked like crystal against the air - I sat beneath a rustling palm On a stone wall warm as fresh bread; And thought I heard her laugh. It was an ordinary day, and I don’t know why I remember her stood beneath that sky and no other; As though that moment could stand for all: A heart without use, blown like the grains Of dust and sand between us, Her eyes hidden by distance, growing dim: White sand, red hair, green eyes, And laughter.
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Sep 24, 2015
Sep 24, 2015 at 9:00 AM UTC
On the beach at Cambrils