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james-gable
james-gable
The vessel rose up suddenly, / And the captain could see from where he sat / A large sea-mammal had mistaken / His paper boat for a paper hat
cruelly April hands me flowers so cruel April the legendary bowers of Babylon that we once enjoyed in dreams and fantasies, dreaming like children, dreams are toys to play with on rainy afternoons when there’s nothing to do and when nothing wants something of you makes a point and laughs at how so much can become so little, and life is reduced to meaningless eulogies and memories are also toys except when you see something for the first time in that way before it was different now it is flat my hometown buildings now flatten my memories they flatten my dreams, deflate, deflating, and now April brings me flowers but all the vases are broken and the clocks don’t mention hours just tick away and say time will heal, paint will peel, rubble will cough dryly, something squeaks the radio is still on I hear? “this is the six o’clock news” let’s turn it off we’re standing in the broken news, top story, relocation and displacement some were conveniently buried in an instant and the flowers from April, thank you, will do just fine, we all wish to die at home there’s nothing left for me now here I feel or for anyone else on our street but they all just hang around dragging their feet and kicking the rocks coughing and remembering what the four walls looked like how we take things for granted even during a war! is that a rat moving down there? I decided I was finished with it all it had finished with me I needed to remind myself what a solid structure looked like and colour and how flowers smelt when the dust doesn’t mask your senses and get into your ears. War comes from ignorance, soldiers are ignorant, if there’s one thing I want to rid myself of it is ignorance, and my badges that weigh me down, I’ll drop them amongst the destruction, two little bombs, two little ripples in the lake, my reflection is clear enough, I know that he is going to need some work not quite mass cleanup just a clean flannel and something delicate to remind me, something delicate to remind me, something delicate to remind me why I cried so hard at 18 and why it felt like it was the end of the world now it looks like the end of the world, but it’s not, just visions of Dresden or Hamburg and with all this, with all this going on I suddenly remember the last honest, real feeling I had was when I was 18 when mum played the piano straight from the sheet the mechanics of her hand I remember how odd it looked the span of her delicate hands now the piano which was overstrung and framed in cast-iron, built in 1911, is in pieces. There are still rings of condensation on the wooden panels from dad’s beers and I wonder where human life fits into all this where iron strength collapses in on itself and yet a ghostly ring remains, it could leave any second but hangs around as if something is unresolved I go out of Coventry take a train end up in a country pub just outside Gloucester no soldiers no 6 o’clock news no flowers covered in chalk no voices calling out as you walk no glum faces dying to talk just a pint of bitter and Dylan Thomas my new life has no nationality my history belonged to my country and now my future belongs to me me and the mouse in my pocket
0
Jul 27, 2016
Jul 27, 2016 at 9:49 AM UTC
Notes On A Return
cruelly April hands me flowers so cruel April the legendary bowers of Babylon that we once enjoyed in dreams and fantasies, dreaming like children, dreams are toys to play with on rainy afternoons when there’s nothing to do and when nothing wants something of you makes a point and laughs at how so much can become so little, and life is reduced to meaningless eulogies and memories are also toys except when you see something for the first time in that way before it was different now it is flat my hometown buildings now flatten my memories they flatten my dreams, deflate, deflating, and now April brings me flowers but all the vases are broken and the clocks don’t mention hours just tick away and say time will heal, paint will peel, rubble will cough dryly, something squeaks the radio is still on I hear? “this is the six o’clock news” let’s turn it off we’re standing in the broken news, top story, relocation and displacement some were conveniently buried in an instant and the flowers from April, thank you, will do just fine, we all wish to die at home there’s nothing left for me now here I feel or for anyone else on our street but they all just hang around dragging their feet and kicking the rocks coughing and remembering what the four walls looked like how we take things for granted even during a war! is that a rat moving down there? I decided I was finished with it all it had finished with me I needed to remind myself what a solid structure looked like and colour and how flowers smelt when the dust doesn’t mask your senses and get into your ears. War comes from ignorance, soldiers are ignorant, if there’s one thing I want to rid myself of it is ignorance, and my badges that weigh me down, I’ll drop them amongst the destruction, two little bombs, two little ripples in the lake, my reflection is clear enough, I know that he is going to need some work not quite mass cleanup just a clean flannel and something delicate to remind me, something delicate to remind me, something delicate to remind me why I cried so hard at 18 and why it felt like it was the end of the world now it looks like the end of the world, but it’s not, just visions of Dresden or Hamburg and with all this, with all this going on I suddenly remember the last honest, real feeling I had was when I was 18 when mum played the piano straight from the sheet the mechanics of her hand I remember how odd it looked the span of her delicate hands now the piano which was overstrung and framed in cast-iron, built in 1911, is in pieces. There are still rings of condensation on the wooden panels from dad’s beers and I wonder where human life fits into all this where iron strength collapses in on itself and yet a ghostly ring remains, it could leave any second but hangs around as if something is unresolved I go out of Coventry take a train end up in a country pub just outside Gloucester no soldiers no 6 o’clock news no flowers covered in chalk no voices calling out as you walk no glum faces dying to talk just a pint of bitter and Dylan Thomas my new life has no nationality my history belonged to my country and now my future belongs to me me and the mouse in my pocket
Continue reading...
100
*“Sleep after toil, port after stormy seas, Ease after war, death after life does greatly please.”* —Edmund Spense |PART ONE| CUL DE SAC *Courtesy is informing The gardener he shall not Be needed next week As sometime before then You will fall suddenly dead* Like a blanket... Yes, like a blanket Or a shawl if you’ll have it— A sheet that whispers a weight Upon your shoulders that rise and fall And rise and roll and once more rise And collapse inevitable as relapse or vice, We arrived as the sun is Saying its final goodnights Life spends some empty Second inside your lungs And continues on its way, moving on Perhaps to resuscitate a Fading gunshot victim Or shake the hand of a minute As time ticks furiously by, A dog licks its teeth A few sorry times, tastes a residual piece Of something tasty he earned In his attempts to learn fully To roll over, He rolls over now and then for fun, In the disapproving face of the sun But it’s a different thing to roll Over at the command of your Master— He who is looking disapprovingly at the world, Disapproves of all of it But through a very small window He had not seen before About the size of an envelope It must have sneaked up on him Most of all he is bored, With packets of cigarettes, Lighting themselves each night in Spectacular repeats bright and brilliant Pyrotechnics of white-hot potential, You must shield your eyes, Master, Heed the warnings of the doctor when he says You are doing yourself no favours, Tempting yourself by leaving them Laying around in plain sight And...now and then, just now, and Just then he finished a whole one, Packet of twenty, and his reflection, Unshaven and puffy-faced in the Deep ocean of the bathroom mirror, Can’t look at him until morning, And morning is a long time away Meanwhile time is Blackening the dog’s sorry gums, It painted such dark spots on his Master's lungs                                               That he now coughs impatiently, The paint grips like superglue to The walls and though a full exhale could Betray their function for one, Deform their shape for two, Lungs so rarely tenderly embrace And now his face goes blue, And blue with many shades of blue, And a touch of the colour of the just-rising moon Nothing comes up... His diaphragm, taut, it stalls, Struck, retching, Everything slows Everything slows — stretches of sounds And moans echoing The sinister intent of Turpentine visions. Each bloodless Indecision You can see him doubled over By the window, even from here, And you’d think this bird will Succeed in catching his worm, Each slowed in turn, nothing changed, Bird was swooping long before the slowness came, Whatever happens, whatever happens... The dog sleeps whilst his ticking legs kick, But slower —   A fly is caught between The unaffected forefinger and Opportunist thumb Of a young girl who is well known, (She once squeezed a cat So tight that its insides Got all twisted and burst), She would not hurt a fly though Especially not this one It’s so lethargic, she thinks, How she blinks at normal speed— Immune somehow Other kids are told to keep away from her By their respective mothers Who’ve no respect for others you’ll see them goose-stepping down streets in stop-motion synchronicity These mums communicate by phone Hogging the lines and spitting malicious Rumours into the telephone wires, Such poison is said to excite cables Causing electrical fires and the Firemen here have been called out several times to find the same boy Of about ten, crying “Help! Pariah Dog!” He’s shouting it now, calling the emergency Services on a credit card phone And his pennies won’t take —So slow it’s hard to watch The bow that fastens the little Girl’s hair keeps falling down, She kicks it down the sleepy evening streets, Rumours cruelly spread of shadows Calling her to where the street sweepers are known Not ever to sweep Everything is slow, as before but Slightly more so, The Master’s contractions In such slow motion rhythm, You couldn’t recognise patterns or Repetitions with short-term memory but they’re rhythms of threes and fours but also nine over eight and Four-four straight, the Tempo is so slow it doesn’t register... Listen closely for a while though: Jazz is on the radio! The dog’s legs still kick as it sleeps As it dreams of jumping the garden gate, Even slower now, And life is longer now, In ways Of course we do not notice But the little girl, Returning home just before dark How will this affect her future? Time’s arrow The tragedy of its trajectory Leaves us in a state That is not worse off, But there is no help in this! Positivity does not come From the things which are simply Not negative And the worm In a slow motion crawl, Indignant, as the bird’s wings Cast long finger-like shadows That are shifting, flickering, Twitching near crisis point, Those last hundred-yards of the race Where lactic-acid-spasms Makes a mess of the atoms And slow-twitch fibres made of Matter once constituting A percentage of the mass Of a sabre-toothed tiger, Cowering in the cold, Feeling the pull of extinction Weighted eyelids, Mischievous hands tugging On the ears And polishing the fangs in museums It was ashamed, the atoms told us this But refused to declare a name for itself Or the beast Slinking and curling like a Shoe sole that bunches up The shoehorn is no good, Not a help, but to borrow Just one word of that line And introduce the trumpet, In its considerations of brass And blues It blows lipless fanfares for the Invertebrate class The worm, with frantic intent, In search of his hole in the ground, Profound effort, See the slinky worm speeding Across the lawn at the speed of a gravestone, The bird getting closer, In it’s time, It’s a fizz of radio waves With a fuzzy static outline, Popping grains and throbbing like Power surging through the telephone line, Where voices can be heard warning of high pressure With a fatalist sigh, and poor weather, A voice with a regional accent Sounding authoritative and wise Intensity in the eyes somehow I imagine, How we paint pictures of faces and people, The voices are so telling at times, You can hear whiskey-burns in the throat Saying things of the colour Of a nose, and sweet childlike lisps Suggest dungarees and freckles, And a gap between the front teeth, Why these? What prejudices Have slipped out weedily from An imagination that is surely Out-valued by its frame Of gold with wooden panels “PARIAH DOG!”.....
0
Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 12:36 AM UTC
The Master's Lungs - Cul De Sac (1)
*“Sleep after toil, port after stormy seas, Ease after war, death after life does greatly please.”* —Edmund Spense |PART ONE| CUL DE SAC *Courtesy is informing The gardener he shall not Be needed next week As sometime before then You will fall suddenly dead* Like a blanket... Yes, like a blanket Or a shawl if you’ll have it— A sheet that whispers a weight Upon your shoulders that rise and fall And rise and roll and once more rise And collapse inevitable as relapse or vice, We arrived as the sun is Saying its final goodnights Life spends some empty Second inside your lungs And continues on its way, moving on Perhaps to resuscitate a Fading gunshot victim Or shake the hand of a minute As time ticks furiously by, A dog licks its teeth A few sorry times, tastes a residual piece Of something tasty he earned In his attempts to learn fully To roll over, He rolls over now and then for fun, In the disapproving face of the sun But it’s a different thing to roll Over at the command of your Master— He who is looking disapprovingly at the world, Disapproves of all of it But through a very small window He had not seen before About the size of an envelope It must have sneaked up on him Most of all he is bored, With packets of cigarettes, Lighting themselves each night in Spectacular repeats bright and brilliant Pyrotechnics of white-hot potential, You must shield your eyes, Master, Heed the warnings of the doctor when he says You are doing yourself no favours, Tempting yourself by leaving them Laying around in plain sight And...now and then, just now, and Just then he finished a whole one, Packet of twenty, and his reflection, Unshaven and puffy-faced in the Deep ocean of the bathroom mirror, Can’t look at him until morning, And morning is a long time away Meanwhile time is Blackening the dog’s sorry gums, It painted such dark spots on his Master's lungs                                               That he now coughs impatiently, The paint grips like superglue to The walls and though a full exhale could Betray their function for one, Deform their shape for two, Lungs so rarely tenderly embrace And now his face goes blue, And blue with many shades of blue, And a touch of the colour of the just-rising moon Nothing comes up... His diaphragm, taut, it stalls, Struck, retching, Everything slows Everything slows — stretches of sounds And moans echoing The sinister intent of Turpentine visions. Each bloodless Indecision You can see him doubled over By the window, even from here, And you’d think this bird will Succeed in catching his worm, Each slowed in turn, nothing changed, Bird was swooping long before the slowness came, Whatever happens, whatever happens... The dog sleeps whilst his ticking legs kick, But slower —   A fly is caught between The unaffected forefinger and Opportunist thumb Of a young girl who is well known, (She once squeezed a cat So tight that its insides Got all twisted and burst), She would not hurt a fly though Especially not this one It’s so lethargic, she thinks, How she blinks at normal speed— Immune somehow Other kids are told to keep away from her By their respective mothers Who’ve no respect for others you’ll see them goose-stepping down streets in stop-motion synchronicity These mums communicate by phone Hogging the lines and spitting malicious Rumours into the telephone wires, Such poison is said to excite cables Causing electrical fires and the Firemen here have been called out several times to find the same boy Of about ten, crying “Help! Pariah Dog!” He’s shouting it now, calling the emergency Services on a credit card phone And his pennies won’t take —So slow it’s hard to watch The bow that fastens the little Girl’s hair keeps falling down, She kicks it down the sleepy evening streets, Rumours cruelly spread of shadows Calling her to where the street sweepers are known Not ever to sweep Everything is slow, as before but Slightly more so, The Master’s contractions In such slow motion rhythm, You couldn’t recognise patterns or Repetitions with short-term memory but they’re rhythms of threes and fours but also nine over eight and Four-four straight, the Tempo is so slow it doesn’t register... Listen closely for a while though: Jazz is on the radio! The dog’s legs still kick as it sleeps As it dreams of jumping the garden gate, Even slower now, And life is longer now, In ways Of course we do not notice But the little girl, Returning home just before dark How will this affect her future? Time’s arrow The tragedy of its trajectory Leaves us in a state That is not worse off, But there is no help in this! Positivity does not come From the things which are simply Not negative And the worm In a slow motion crawl, Indignant, as the bird’s wings Cast long finger-like shadows That are shifting, flickering, Twitching near crisis point, Those last hundred-yards of the race Where lactic-acid-spasms Makes a mess of the atoms And slow-twitch fibres made of Matter once constituting A percentage of the mass Of a sabre-toothed tiger, Cowering in the cold, Feeling the pull of extinction Weighted eyelids, Mischievous hands tugging On the ears And polishing the fangs in museums It was ashamed, the atoms told us this But refused to declare a name for itself Or the beast Slinking and curling like a Shoe sole that bunches up The shoehorn is no good, Not a help, but to borrow Just one word of that line And introduce the trumpet, In its considerations of brass And blues It blows lipless fanfares for the Invertebrate class The worm, with frantic intent, In search of his hole in the ground, Profound effort, See the slinky worm speeding Across the lawn at the speed of a gravestone, The bird getting closer, In it’s time, It’s a fizz of radio waves With a fuzzy static outline, Popping grains and throbbing like Power surging through the telephone line, Where voices can be heard warning of high pressure With a fatalist sigh, and poor weather, A voice with a regional accent Sounding authoritative and wise Intensity in the eyes somehow I imagine, How we paint pictures of faces and people, The voices are so telling at times, You can hear whiskey-burns in the throat Saying things of the colour Of a nose, and sweet childlike lisps Suggest dungarees and freckles, And a gap between the front teeth, Why these? What prejudices Have slipped out weedily from An imagination that is surely Out-valued by its frame Of gold with wooden panels “PARIAH DOG!”.....
Continue reading...
216
|PART TWO| **D’YOU KNOW THAT FEATHER TOOK 23 ½ DAYS TO LAND** *Courtesy is not making fuss Swallowing the disatisfaction That grows as you Realise this is the end Quickly think up some wise words To sign off with* ENTERING NOW, like A man marching in honey: A birdwatcher with a foot-long prime on his single-reflex camera, Also, enter with pages stuffed in your pockets, On which are shown pictures of birds to identify, Explaining where they nest and The altitude at which they fly with A detailed history of their forest-call-cry He left in a rush, A cup of tea (milk, no sugar, weak, hard water) Was left untouched cooling, But not at the speed that he sped down the road, Spotting a thrush and releasing the wheel, Fumbling for binoculars with excited hands, Faith until death or heaven! Even when he’s identified the bird, still No one is steering his burgundy rover, still, His hands are busied By the focus wheel, Won’t look away, In focus, out again, In once more, Look at him! Show off! His shutter snaps shut and alarm spreads Amongst the birds and they dart away in groups Fast as watercolour, laboured And blurring in mid-flight It takes a second or two for the echoe to die Echoes find places to rest Amongst the blades of grass Humming in wait of a second coming A matchstick structure, sublime In its intricacy and ********** Of classical architectural traditions Starts to collapse, later, In good time, wait, and see The matchsticks hit the surface, Almost in reverse, it rattles The table with fine-rain Levels of cymbal crashes and violence, If an ear was to listen It would register the tinnitus that We hear in our denial of pure silence. Our denial of mortality In its entirety, we laugh at those who See ghosts on the west country coasts, Those who dare catch a glimpse Of long-departed lovers On the boats that return from Here or there, Or solemnly sink With conviction, miles from land And there will be those who will Want to understand This woman we now see, Was once married to a captain of ships That sailed in the formation Of an arrow, long and narrow, He sank them all, bequeathed His fleet to the icy grips of That body of water famous For having strong arms and Snatching hands. She will never Know if it was part of his plan. He wrote her once to explain, But the postman was caught In the rain of springtime, That time which is known to be The season of showers, And, attached to the grim mornings Are the cruellest of hours That postmen share with no one else, But the letters, have so much life sealed inside, Sealed by a human tongue With traces of every kiss In his pride, the postman did not give the Soggy letter to the captain’s bride, It ended up floating from here to there Unintelligible for sure, the ink Ran carelessly into puddles and drains, When the ships all sank They said nothing remained The envelope was sealed by a kiss By now it has found its way back to the sea By way of rivers, tributaries, Carried by wind and leaves, On the feet of hikers that rest On their backs under a canopy of trees, It ran down the hills and salted Ever so slightly more the sea Where her captain’s body is found And if he opens his eyes he’ll See how his letter was returned. If he opens his eyes. She is running towards the house Love, restless as the wind that determinedly Keeps us all awake, it makes dull noises in its Late night reflections on an unfulfilled existence, It rubs its snout on rocks and stretches Itself around their base to release frustrated energy, They start to come loose and tumble into the sea, Splashing the coastline with the tears of Shipwreck tragedies, The fallout of her uncertainty In the ways of love, Feeling so high up above her captain and unable to touch His memories That in fact never set foot on land Her skirt is up above her knees, Both feet off the ground, The jangling sound of her keys are Like thunder in this slowed down world Where the worm is still journeying To his hole and the bird Is like a badly tuned channel Where you can’t make out a single word She runs towards the front door Her moist eyes, familiar with These skies that describe ominous clouds And rain that hammers the floor Again and once more and soon She feels she will be buried in ice With both of her husbands, She sees him doubled over by the window Panic in slow motion is like A ship slowly upturning In the drama of desolate sea stretches That have swallowed so many She moves, fast as a fastened shadow Stretching. Like life, reflected on the back of a spoon, And the sun, finally, swallowed the moon
0
Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 12:28 AM UTC
The Master's Lungs - Landing of a Feather (2)
|PART TWO| **D’YOU KNOW THAT FEATHER TOOK 23 ½ DAYS TO LAND** *Courtesy is not making fuss Swallowing the disatisfaction That grows as you Realise this is the end Quickly think up some wise words To sign off with* ENTERING NOW, like A man marching in honey: A birdwatcher with a foot-long prime on his single-reflex camera, Also, enter with pages stuffed in your pockets, On which are shown pictures of birds to identify, Explaining where they nest and The altitude at which they fly with A detailed history of their forest-call-cry He left in a rush, A cup of tea (milk, no sugar, weak, hard water) Was left untouched cooling, But not at the speed that he sped down the road, Spotting a thrush and releasing the wheel, Fumbling for binoculars with excited hands, Faith until death or heaven! Even when he’s identified the bird, still No one is steering his burgundy rover, still, His hands are busied By the focus wheel, Won’t look away, In focus, out again, In once more, Look at him! Show off! His shutter snaps shut and alarm spreads Amongst the birds and they dart away in groups Fast as watercolour, laboured And blurring in mid-flight It takes a second or two for the echoe to die Echoes find places to rest Amongst the blades of grass Humming in wait of a second coming A matchstick structure, sublime In its intricacy and ********** Of classical architectural traditions Starts to collapse, later, In good time, wait, and see The matchsticks hit the surface, Almost in reverse, it rattles The table with fine-rain Levels of cymbal crashes and violence, If an ear was to listen It would register the tinnitus that We hear in our denial of pure silence. Our denial of mortality In its entirety, we laugh at those who See ghosts on the west country coasts, Those who dare catch a glimpse Of long-departed lovers On the boats that return from Here or there, Or solemnly sink With conviction, miles from land And there will be those who will Want to understand This woman we now see, Was once married to a captain of ships That sailed in the formation Of an arrow, long and narrow, He sank them all, bequeathed His fleet to the icy grips of That body of water famous For having strong arms and Snatching hands. She will never Know if it was part of his plan. He wrote her once to explain, But the postman was caught In the rain of springtime, That time which is known to be The season of showers, And, attached to the grim mornings Are the cruellest of hours That postmen share with no one else, But the letters, have so much life sealed inside, Sealed by a human tongue With traces of every kiss In his pride, the postman did not give the Soggy letter to the captain’s bride, It ended up floating from here to there Unintelligible for sure, the ink Ran carelessly into puddles and drains, When the ships all sank They said nothing remained The envelope was sealed by a kiss By now it has found its way back to the sea By way of rivers, tributaries, Carried by wind and leaves, On the feet of hikers that rest On their backs under a canopy of trees, It ran down the hills and salted Ever so slightly more the sea Where her captain’s body is found And if he opens his eyes he’ll See how his letter was returned. If he opens his eyes. She is running towards the house Love, restless as the wind that determinedly Keeps us all awake, it makes dull noises in its Late night reflections on an unfulfilled existence, It rubs its snout on rocks and stretches Itself around their base to release frustrated energy, They start to come loose and tumble into the sea, Splashing the coastline with the tears of Shipwreck tragedies, The fallout of her uncertainty In the ways of love, Feeling so high up above her captain and unable to touch His memories That in fact never set foot on land Her skirt is up above her knees, Both feet off the ground, The jangling sound of her keys are Like thunder in this slowed down world Where the worm is still journeying To his hole and the bird Is like a badly tuned channel Where you can’t make out a single word She runs towards the front door Her moist eyes, familiar with These skies that describe ominous clouds And rain that hammers the floor Again and once more and soon She feels she will be buried in ice With both of her husbands, She sees him doubled over by the window Panic in slow motion is like A ship slowly upturning In the drama of desolate sea stretches That have swallowed so many She moves, fast as a fastened shadow Stretching. Like life, reflected on the back of a spoon, And the sun, finally, swallowed the moon
Continue reading...
144
|PART THREE| **THE EMPTY SECOND BECOMES AN EMPTY SPACE** *When it’s all over forget about courtesy, grab hold off a shooting star and ride it all the way until the photons say the last word with a pulse of light* The man is no longer doubled over and Observable from the window As a result of his fifty-eight years the equation of his life All comes to zero Whilst the mocking ticking and tocking Of an old clock knocking minutes like Nails into the wall— He disappeared in a puff of smoke, The ice in his glass melted and the woman picked it up, Drinking it in a single gulp, the glass comes down as if Magnetically drawn to the floor, the floor, Where she lies silently and stretches her body To get some release, she rubs her face against The carpet, nothing matters except the next second, Eyes, behind a blink or two, dart to another part of the empty room She couldn’t think any further ahead than a second at all And the zodiac crashed open the ram sent stars flying the crab snipped the string that suspended the stars mars took some flak and finally the sun was burst by the horned goat and aquarius held it like the final fluid sphere Stars, burning across the sky like the striking of a match Those wishing on shooting stars couldn’t decide what they wanted many of them flying as there were As well-known monsters Weighed down by human hope, clear out our night sky, Leaving not a freckle to observe Telescopes now point into bedroom windows Shadows portray a sort of life, Shadow puppets depict death through Tragedy and lapses in timekeeping and Obsessions with vanity Life spends some empty second Inside your lungs, Continues on it’s way To resuscitate a slowly fading knife attack victim Or shake the hand of a minute, Time is ticking laboriously by The light, motherless and lost, Spat out at as the sun was burst, It looks up to see the unveiling of the universe, Finally, the oyster swallowed the sea. —I didn’t want to be a poet by any means. After what happened working on the lifeboats I couldn’t go near the sea, so in a way I chose which parts of it I wanted and wrote about them. It terrifies me and fascinates me at the same time. I fully believe I will return to it only as ash...
0
Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 12:23 AM UTC
The Master's Lungs - An Empty Second (3)
|PART THREE| **THE EMPTY SECOND BECOMES AN EMPTY SPACE** *When it’s all over forget about courtesy, grab hold off a shooting star and ride it all the way until the photons say the last word with a pulse of light* The man is no longer doubled over and Observable from the window As a result of his fifty-eight years the equation of his life All comes to zero Whilst the mocking ticking and tocking Of an old clock knocking minutes like Nails into the wall— He disappeared in a puff of smoke, The ice in his glass melted and the woman picked it up, Drinking it in a single gulp, the glass comes down as if Magnetically drawn to the floor, the floor, Where she lies silently and stretches her body To get some release, she rubs her face against The carpet, nothing matters except the next second, Eyes, behind a blink or two, dart to another part of the empty room She couldn’t think any further ahead than a second at all And the zodiac crashed open the ram sent stars flying the crab snipped the string that suspended the stars mars took some flak and finally the sun was burst by the horned goat and aquarius held it like the final fluid sphere Stars, burning across the sky like the striking of a match Those wishing on shooting stars couldn’t decide what they wanted many of them flying as there were As well-known monsters Weighed down by human hope, clear out our night sky, Leaving not a freckle to observe Telescopes now point into bedroom windows Shadows portray a sort of life, Shadow puppets depict death through Tragedy and lapses in timekeeping and Obsessions with vanity Life spends some empty second Inside your lungs, Continues on it’s way To resuscitate a slowly fading knife attack victim Or shake the hand of a minute, Time is ticking laboriously by The light, motherless and lost, Spat out at as the sun was burst, It looks up to see the unveiling of the universe, Finally, the oyster swallowed the sea. —I didn’t want to be a poet by any means. After what happened working on the lifeboats I couldn’t go near the sea, so in a way I chose which parts of it I wanted and wrote about them. It terrifies me and fascinates me at the same time. I fully believe I will return to it only as ash...
Continue reading...
61
Your bow is all elbow, a flank of forearm that is supporting and simply cradling my imagination where a dozen or so lifeboats hang off starboard in case things get too much I, captained by your sturdy arms, nip up to the crow’s nest for a sip of spiced *** for a bit of warmth and perhaps more— a full beard that reminds me so much of Darwin I feel certain I am on the Beagle and hungry to shoot some lame birds one by one! Your shoulder where I can sleep forever— come sharks and eat my catch while I whisper poetry, summon ghosts and **** off Hemingway, whose macho act was betrayed by his pain-filled eyes and sensitively painted one-word skies You, my aching hull in human form, rocking gently as the sea slows our progress knowing we are wishing away time too often the working of the gyro prevents my seasick blushes we do not yet know each other that well but all is fine as I see it, your arms really are made of shipworthy wood and beneath deck, where I will sleep tonight above Atlantis’s cesspit, we just bounce off each wave, getting closer and closer to the moon but not yet arrived, has sleep come too soon for me tonight? I’ll rest and stretch and groan like weary ****** do once Surya helps me turn out the light —Yes, once my ship did start to sink. I called until my throat was gone and ended up swimming a good distance until crucially a boat came by and pulled me out of the sea. I remember thinking: I should feel more grateful to be alive. I went back to where it sank and retrieved a few personal items, then I sat on the beach a wept as if the whole thing had just hit me.
0
Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 12:03 AM UTC
Gyroscope
Your bow is all elbow, a flank of forearm that is supporting and simply cradling my imagination where a dozen or so lifeboats hang off starboard in case things get too much I, captained by your sturdy arms, nip up to the crow’s nest for a sip of spiced *** for a bit of warmth and perhaps more— a full beard that reminds me so much of Darwin I feel certain I am on the Beagle and hungry to shoot some lame birds one by one! Your shoulder where I can sleep forever— come sharks and eat my catch while I whisper poetry, summon ghosts and **** off Hemingway, whose macho act was betrayed by his pain-filled eyes and sensitively painted one-word skies You, my aching hull in human form, rocking gently as the sea slows our progress knowing we are wishing away time too often the working of the gyro prevents my seasick blushes we do not yet know each other that well but all is fine as I see it, your arms really are made of shipworthy wood and beneath deck, where I will sleep tonight above Atlantis’s cesspit, we just bounce off each wave, getting closer and closer to the moon but not yet arrived, has sleep come too soon for me tonight? I’ll rest and stretch and groan like weary ****** do once Surya helps me turn out the light —Yes, once my ship did start to sink. I called until my throat was gone and ended up swimming a good distance until crucially a boat came by and pulled me out of the sea. I remember thinking: I should feel more grateful to be alive. I went back to where it sank and retrieved a few personal items, then I sat on the beach a wept as if the whole thing had just hit me.
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49
a series of quatrains Anchor’s bound for hell as it falls Sadly I watch the fast rope slip It is gone, I need a strong sip From a sailor’s bottle, land calls In a boat, earth and moon move you these deceptive cargo ships hide the stash of smugglers, I choose To rock back and forth with the tide Such fearless ships save lives at night and daytime too but not for thanks for it also ferries heartbreak when lovers part on boarding planks A message in a bottle lost was found on a cold Cornish coast The message read “darling please know my love will swim across seas” I daren’t live by sea much longer Oh! what I’ve seen, fear gets stronger with every lapping slurp I hear: the drowned whispering in my ear Once I fished in this bay of shells My line was frayed from reeling sharks A blue whale fought me three miles out In his bowel I awoke at last Boat or ship? For now ‘ships’ they fly A rocking chair, without duty They float, enchant, sink but don’t cry shipwrecks are a thing of beauty
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Jun 14, 2016
Jun 14, 2016 at 11:56 PM UTC
Failing to Float
I chanced upon an old letter That had clearly sailed legless on seas Crumpled, damp but inside the envelope Intelligible writing by sight But by comprehension I was lost Disorientated by sea-sick phrases Somewhere a long way from our shore a man or woman, very desperate to find their way on board a ship going in the right direction When those who could speak a second or even third language were called forward this person’s mind reached far, back to french lessons at school, every country visited and greeting noted and piped up: I speak very good French! But French speakers were common Try harder! shouted a polite man I can speak Zulu!? silence... *Pashto is very useful… Ah! my mother tongue, I dream in that language Yes I am still in touch with my mother with whom I speak, of course, in Pashto* Setting sail on the lonely sea There is nowhere to hide besides the engine room, And in there you will be used as fuel Put to good use —Well I did think once that I was being summoned to an underwater land but in fact it was a ruse, a trick to rob me of wallet
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Jun 14, 2016
Jun 14, 2016 at 11:50 PM UTC
Pashto
I chanced upon an old letter That had clearly sailed legless on seas Crumpled, damp but inside the envelope: Intelligible writing by sight But by comprehension I was lost Disorientated and sea-sick. Sometimes you come across an object, and in no way can you explain its origin, it’s purpose, or the frame of mind of the person who last encountered it, The letter was dry and slightly smudged but the envelope (and stamp) could not be made out at all I could not send it back If I could I would be lost for words, as it seems they were in ways: *...and I have little leaves, I love you and I miss you so much. When he finished the day in the ocean waiting for you to choose from Aserahosov read our son and apricot. My shirtsleeves damp in your memory. Our subject is expected later to the rest of the flight path of the earth ready to kiss a little faster on the planet. I broke a strong bird while I like the cakes, I break the strong current. Love my *** I strongly flow. It has been Pecan pie is to say...* My understanding of romance is minimal But to have leaves seems morbid Even more so than the breaking of the bird... Why should a bird get hurt in this gross courtship? and a strong one too, what act of love can break anything but a heart? I like the cakes, I break the strong currents Perhaps the words of someone rushing Across oceans in the name of love Slicing through the chunky waves But the cake is a bit out of place Surely no one would rush across oceans Wide and rough and restless For a cake that was simply ‘liked’ This must all be a prank... This one then— *Love my *** off I strongly flow…* Now, I hope the flowing is another Nautical reference, it would tie in nicely With the breaking of currents- I cannot comment on what precedes it There is much I cannot discuss In this disgusting letter, I wish I had not been given it. **** —If I were a seahorse, I know that just being a seahorse would be enough...
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Jun 14, 2016
Jun 14, 2016 at 11:46 PM UTC
The Letter
I chanced upon an old letter That had clearly sailed legless on seas Crumpled, damp but inside the envelope: Intelligible writing by sight But by comprehension I was lost Disorientated and sea-sick. Sometimes you come across an object, and in no way can you explain its origin, it’s purpose, or the frame of mind of the person who last encountered it, The letter was dry and slightly smudged but the envelope (and stamp) could not be made out at all I could not send it back If I could I would be lost for words, as it seems they were in ways: *...and I have little leaves, I love you and I miss you so much. When he finished the day in the ocean waiting for you to choose from Aserahosov read our son and apricot. My shirtsleeves damp in your memory. Our subject is expected later to the rest of the flight path of the earth ready to kiss a little faster on the planet. I broke a strong bird while I like the cakes, I break the strong current. Love my *** I strongly flow. It has been Pecan pie is to say...* My understanding of romance is minimal But to have leaves seems morbid Even more so than the breaking of the bird... Why should a bird get hurt in this gross courtship? and a strong one too, what act of love can break anything but a heart? I like the cakes, I break the strong currents Perhaps the words of someone rushing Across oceans in the name of love Slicing through the chunky waves But the cake is a bit out of place Surely no one would rush across oceans Wide and rough and restless For a cake that was simply ‘liked’ This must all be a prank... This one then— *Love my *** off I strongly flow…* Now, I hope the flowing is another Nautical reference, it would tie in nicely With the breaking of currents- I cannot comment on what precedes it There is much I cannot discuss In this disgusting letter, I wish I had not been given it. **** —If I were a seahorse, I know that just being a seahorse would be enough...
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50
Sunset is one time, one thing I dare to love Different to sunrise, but not so much in light It’s how fishermen hold so tightly to their line In evening, my countenance feels pleasantly light I move through cool air, a smooth-flowing line Intersecting invisible ties, each person and each they love I wait for some odd thing in a long ordered line Calmed by the blending of sun and sea that must be love, Serenely, I disappoint those in need of cigarette light The sun bade farewell to the sea, and fell below the horizon line —Urchins are hedgehogs of the sea, I was called an urchin by my mother, which I loved. The nicknames only got worse from that point
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Jun 14, 2016
Jun 14, 2016 at 11:37 PM UTC
Sunset Tritina
A Cornish sunrise is spoiled by bleating tourists; I enjoy the sunrise with all but my eyes. As sure as God is sifting out the chaff and with mathematical certainty... my listlessness is becoming an issue. A fist is shaking at me again, but I’ve stopped looking at faces. I reach for a book, not to read, but to straighten my posture, by opening it in my lap. I hear sailing boats always, living here, the constant boom swing and rattling of cheaply made metal clips and whipping ropes. I hear the negligence of novice sailors and their secret wishes to accidentally lose their family on the rocks. I hear the sound of life jackets hanging on their pegs whilst skinny kids think that the sea is just a big blue bouncy castle. I have observed how things can go very wrong; I was a lifeguard and then coast guard working for the RNLI. Now I try and enjoy the sunrise each morning but the noisiest of tourists are walking around in groups of foghorn and sheep’s wool and warning us of nothing — so loudly. They’ve closed the lighthouse and the docks, ship don’t come here anymore. Just these novice sailors who, with unerring instinct, sink for the weight of their masculinity or lose a crew member or be pinched painfully by a crab. Their kids ask: How do boats float? They ask that as their life jackets swing on the peg — the seas are not calm today.
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Jun 14, 2016
Jun 14, 2016 at 11:21 PM UTC
Prologue