James B. Nicola © 2017
On “ethnic cleansing”
If the Zeitgeist’s alcoholic
who shall abstain
but the occasional poet
who likes his elixirs to taste
of wines and beers and spirit,
not guns and bombs and blood;
who’ll not capitulate to bitter folly,
facilitate pernicious, unmarked diction,
or conciliate with innocuous daily drumming?
The journalist may—and has, that perennial enabler.
Hear him on the bristly radio and on the puffed-out TV screen
where high-definition picture’s the husk
of misdefinition of sound-without-end-amen.
But only wince at what you abhor
lest you be abhorred for championing
the paltriest of causes—
Right Words for Right Thoughts,
Namely, this:
Let us not call a holocaust a cleansing,
nor humor those who do without a cry—
Yet be wise enough, or waif enough, to know
that all we can do about it is to write
That our shard be stumbled upon, one smoky day,
in a whistling wind, by a teary, weary survivor
who’ll wonder what all the Cleansing Times were for.
Lament
Let nations fight like gentry—shiny knights
at tournaments where ladies still wore silk
and horns were blown to signal starts of fights.
If men have at it, let their kings proceed
in pairs, Harry to Harry, elk to elk.
And let no mortal make the ladies bleed
nor tear each others’ hairs out: let them be bred
like countesses and queens that tears be shed,
not blood. And by the stands of flags and cheers
let victors be decided, and their jeers
injure by shame sharper than violence.
And if a statewide conflict must ensue,
let those knights go, the rich, not me—not you!
But chivalry is slain: No modern prince
dare demonstrate deportment at the lists.
And millionaires are never sent to war,
only the millions, and the women too,
sans knights, sans lords, sans courtly chauvinists,
in numbers unimaginable before.
Please Don’t
Please don’t tell me Columbus discovered America;
there were persons here, still overlooked.
Please don’t say a policeman is my friend;
there were persons here, who overlooked.
Please don’t think Britain a democracy;
there were persons there, long overlooked.
Please don’t ask me to go back to Church;
there’s a preacher there, looking over.
Band-Aids®
Why did the Johnsons or the Curads ever
think to make their strips the color
of skin (well, Caucasian skin)?
I’d think a wound would better heal
if sealed in a bright, garish, opposite hue,
purple, green, heliotrope, or blue
so passersby might see that you’d been wounded, and where,
and refrain from grabbing and squeezing or slapping or scratching you there.
And as goes the flesh, so goes the spirit,
so goes the heart: If only we could
affix a flagrant and gaudy bandage
where we’ve bled and grown scabs, not so that
one might bring up the dark topic of how
the wound happened, but so that, without a word,
we might re-immerse in a world of people,
friends and strangers, and not worry so much
about being unintentionally slapped or scratched
in the unreal felt place deep within,
right where—. . . Well, haven’t you lived this yourself?
Haven’t you had to leave a room, suddenly,
when no one had the least of idea of why?
Some gashes like that, hueless and invisible,
seem to bleed and bleed, never stopping,
and get deeper and deeper and deeper and deeper
and deeper and deeper and deeper.
In Defense of Dorothy Parker
When bombs are humorous, they are not dropped
merely to destroy, not primarily, not in the end,
but conquer. The Slayer’s the Healer after all.
Ends might or might not justify the means,
but O what means we’re given in the meanwhile!
And every ball of fire slung over a rampart
is thrown to heat up what is holed up in
the fortress, sure, but also to provide
light. It is always night, under the skin.
When a fort is razed by a bombardment,
maybe that outpost’s better off without it.
A broken valentine is only placed
into hands that can tape it back together.
Likewise, the sting of wit is never simple.
The treatment for a sting is mudpacks, right?
So when the thing that’s hurled has been compacted
into a glob, the more effectively it lands
not pulverized into such feeble spatter
as smears which can be easily wiped off.
Oh, sure, the Object of our aim could duck,
but were she or I to land one, the victim
would have mud right there, handy, to salve the bite.
And there would be a miniscule chance that one day,
a ball might be slung back and we might play.
Rhyme #2: The Thing About Rhyme
The thing about rhyme is, if we start a sequence
back and forth, you and I, in fun
or seriousness, or both, and I start one
real late some evening when we’ve been acting like a couple of delinquents
drinking too much, or are just so tired you can’t think up
a retort to my lead-in, so we let
each other sleep, leaving the couplet
incomplete, why, then I’m certain to wake up
to inspiration, an answer to a beckoning breath.
Rhyme keeps us going, connected to something living, making
the give and take of life one, giving while taking
us through sleep, long nights and, I should imagine, death.
James B. Nicola © 2015
New Age
There have been holes
and there have been explosions
leaving holes
and other sorts of nothing
in their wakes. We are their wakes. But we’re
awake, so there is, in the holes,
hope.
Get up. Get up.
Get up.
Oedipus got up, Lear got up, Pericles rose again,
Philomela even flew, and Daphne sprouted flowers and spread
made whole again somewhat
from their despair.
Were they but fictional? Maybe, but certainly myths
are not merely untrue, but also more true.
I too have turned to a laurel bush, to a blind man
roaming the earth seeming to babble, for that is poetry;
I too have gone silent instead of inveighing or cursing.
And Poland disappeared once—and came back!
Get up! Get up! The Fall was a false start
befalling only once, and years ago—
Look—Nature heals herself and every year!
We have not yet!—I have not yet, except to be
stoned by scorn or ignored, as the ancient pagan seer
would be today by those who refuse to know
this practicer of old New Ages’ art,
by those who insist on remaining in the holes.
Thus has it been, thus shall it ever be;
this age, this era, this eternity.
So what? Get up. Get up. Get up.
Get up: Watergate, Irangate, Enron, Napalm,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Cambodia, Viet Nam,
a-bomb, h-bomb, suicide bomb, The bomb —
even in the ancient world, even the chosen
people obliterated nations.
That’s nothing new. What’s new is the magnitude
WQ2and that we know about it. And in that there’s hope
if you are outraged and stay outraged but keep
getting up. Get up.
Get up! Any last day is the dawn
of a first day, a new age, another turn
of the spiral, which you don’t even notice until
you get off it and look back where you have been to try
to see where you are going—as when reading a poem.
Then you can be told, and see, you’ve come
full circle, but you’re NOT where you started, no,
you’re higher, lower, farther out,
further in, all of the above. Which seems impossible
but is so only in geometry, not in the growth of souls.
Not in the progress of the Soul of Man.
So get up, get up get up get up, World.
There have been explosions
and they have left holes.
Nothing stands up, nothing is symmetrical, or balanced,
or even true anymore. So what? Get up!
The Ghost may be only ectoplasm
so His nudge may be hard to feel.
But the spiral’s broadened even as it’s shrunk,
and the swallow is singing, and the darkling thrush flinging,
and the poet says get up Get up GET UP!
James B. Nicola © 2015
Christopher Norris
A Family Business
‘A Family Business’ has to do with Margaret Thatcher’s chapel-going childhood, her small-town petty-bourgeois social background, her rise to power, her domestic and foreign policies, and above all the massive and enduring effects of her period in office. The poem will I think be fairly uncontroversial in reflecting on her father’s likely influence but perhaps more of a red rag to various bulls in what it says about the tenacity, psychological depth, and morally damaging character of that influence. There are moments of comparative light relief but the piece is basically an exercise in Juvenalian saeva indignatio, or the sort of satire that takes no hostages and which extends no tolerant ironic allowances for human frailty or untoward circumstance. In fact there are passages where the indignatio almost overwhelms the satire and, as happens at times with TV shows like Spitting Image, the poetry takes on a decidedly angry – though I hope not abrasive – tone.
A Family Business
Three pews back on the right she sits, devout
And hanging on each word the preacher aims
At those few souls elect who know about
Shop-keeping and the providential claims
Of shrewd accountancy along with that
Fine double-entry scheme of things that frames
Their godly warrant for arriving at
New ways to optimise the current state
Of family fortunes. This they’ve got off pat
Through years of diligence to correlate
Their Christian faith with what attracts the most
Lucrative custom at the lowest rate
Of overheads or taxes one could boast
About in decent company and not
Raise pious eyebrows. There she sits, engrossed,
As he (her father) tells them how they’ve got
To lay up worldly goods as well as store
Up blessings that would pay out on the dot
At that last day of reckoning when the more
Astute among them who’d resolved to look
Out for themselves and theirs would surely score
Top marks in God’s panoptic ledger-book
Of souls redeemed. Not so that other bunch
Whose talk of social conscience showed they took
The gospel texts to preach some out-to-lunch,
Most likely socialist idea of how
To save us from the moral credit-crunch
That came of living for the here-and-now
Of private greed. On this he reassured
His restive congregation: they allow,
Indeed demand, a gloss for readers cured
Of such delusive notions and aware
That what most efficaciously ensured
The soul’s deliverance from its mortal share
Of sinfulness was not the vain desire
To give up, Lear-like, all the goods in their
Hard-won possession. Let them heed the prior
Since commerce-tested maxim that the way
To true salvation might instead require
That one give up those hopelessly passé
Ideas of soul-salvation that decreed
An end to acquisition and convey,
Rather, the soul’s as well as body’s need
For laying in enough to see them through
These testing times. Then maybe they’d succeed
(The alderman admonished) and undo
The ill effects of that false message spread
By liberals and social-hopers who
Believed the task of giving daily bread
To those in need of it was higher on
The to-do list than seeking to embed
The fear of God in human hearts far gone
In wickedness. His daughter ponders this
And other points in his distinctly non-
PC approach that some might take amiss
Though just the cure (she thinks) for that malaise
Of faith misplaced that looks for future bliss
In some fine programme for a higher phase
Of ethical advancement when the whole
Existing scheme will enter its last days
And then emerge transformed. She sees her role
Already as the messenger who’ll bear
His tidings from that chapel where the sole
Mark of success was rousing folk to prayer
And make of it a doctrine that would cause
Even old socialists, caught unaware
By her new gospel-truth, to doubt the laws
Of progress. These (they took it) should consist
In keeping their utopias on pause,
Projecting justice as a long-term tryst
With history, and – when medium-term defeats
Piled up – recalling all the chances missed
As evidence of how the world mistreats
Those visionary few who’d prove at last
The ones who got it right. In the mean streets
Of Grantham, Lincs, the Zeitgeist stands aghast
As those beliefs that once maintained a bond
Between ideologues of any cast
From centre-left to centre-right, beyond
Mere party politics, are felt to lose
All sense or pertinence and then respond
By self-destructing as the parties choose
Their lesser evil or, more often, opt
For some malign amalgam that would fuse
The worst of every world. Why had they stopped,
She wondered, those old Tories she despised,
Short of the perfect answer: to adopt
The techniques he’d successfully devised,
Her preacher-patriarch, to keep his flock
Of listeners so routinely unsurprised,
Like her, by such hard sayings as would shock
Those with more tender consciences, upset
The ‘Socialists for Jesus’ lot, or knock
A hole in all things shored against the threat
Of old Jehovah. These might take the form
Of biblical remonstrance or be let
Loose like a kind of Benjaminian storm
From paradise that left its mounting pile
Of debris and propelled the shambling swarm
Of progress-touters forward all the while
Toward the same catastrophe whose dread
Event he’d conjured up. His graphic style
Left little doubt of how it should be read
By God’s elect as yet another sign,
If such were needed, that the daily bread
The Lord’s Prayer spoke of, like the loaves and wine
Of Canaan, figured forth the moral good
Of gainful trade. Let no-one then repine,
He cautioned, if the texts thus understood
Seemed lacking in those qualities that earned
The praise of social-gospellers who could,
By cunning tweaks, convince us they discerned
In scripture Christ’s intention to inspire
His followers, then and now, with lessons learned
From proto-communism’s book, or fire
Their fervent souls with some perverse new take
On the old texts that reckoned all their dire
Apocalyptic prophecies would make,
If suitably construed, a fine device
To turn his message right around and shake
Its biblical foundations. So they’d splice,
Those heretics, a secularizing mode
Of exegesis with the kind of twice-
Born zeal for some redemptive twist that showed
Them destined from the outset to that fate
Decreed for all who falsified the code
Of scripture since they thought such change of state
Pertained to Caesar’s realm or the domain
Of social justice where we might create
Some ersatz heaven on earth. This he’d explain
By citing verse and chapter week by week
Until his exhortations filled her brain
With their bewildering mix of bible-speak
And his own trademark brand of Poujadiste
Small-town ressentiment that made him seek,
Each Sunday, some occult sign of the beast
Now slouching close. Or he’d find nearer home
Some new and shocking sign of how we’d ceased
To honour parents, dutifully comb
The Good Book for instruction, hold in awe
The Ten Commandments, count the Church of Rome
Most grievously in breach of every law
Laid down for our salvation, and – his theme
In stressful times – acknowledge the deep flaw
In human nature. This should make it seem
Sheer hubris, so the lesson ran, to think
In terms of social progress or to deem
Us capable of virtues that would prink
Our defects out in any decent dress
That wouldn’t, on a closer viewing, shrink
Down in the undeceiving wash to stress
How chronically deluded were those folk
Who pinned our only chance of blessedness
To hopes like these. The truth of what he spoke
She came to think self-evident, and so
Considered it her greatest master-stroke
In later times of crisis to forego
All queasy conscience-searching and endorse
That same bone-deep and chapel-nurtured low
Opinion of mankind that had its source,
Not only in his fixed idea of sin
Congenital and passed down through the course
Of post-Edenic history, but in
His having cautioned her to disregard
All claims that ‘social progress’ let her win
Against old prejudices that died hard
Amongst their kind. This was the sort of tale,
He said, in which those progress-mongers starred
As heroes of an exploit doomed to fail
Since based on an agenda that proposed
Some secular deliverance from the vale
Of suffering whose significance he glozed,
Each Sunday, as God-sanctioned to remind
The faithful of that crookedness disclosed
In the sin-darkened heart of humankind.
Such was the message borne by gospel text
And by the clinching evidence we find
From one historic instance to the next
Of promised heavens-on-earth that soon revealed
The age-old bitter truth whose import vexed
The social hopers since its only yield
For them was flat despair. She had no thought
That perhaps Alfred’s’s take on things concealed
Motives or interests of another sort,
That maybe his high praise for those who laid
Up earthly riches might find scant support
In holy writ, or that his daily trade
In groceries and far from generous view
Of average human nature as displayed
In everyday transactions gives a clue
To why his gloss on scripture took a slant
So sin-obsessed, so resolute to do
His fellow-mortals down, and keen to grant
The ultimate depravity of all
Those secular redemptions that supplant
The progress-shattering truth. That’s why they fall
Under proscription as the devil’s work
Which still (his constant theme) holds us in thrall
To heretic conclusions that can lurk
Unnoticed in the noblest hopes and dreams
Of liberals or those whose bright-side quirk
Was liable to bring their splendid schemes
Of social justice to the sorry end
Reserved for infidels. On suchlike themes,
With sundry variations, she’d depend
In times to come when moral or humane
Considerations turned out to commend
Some policy that went against the grain
Of pure self-interest, or that said we’d best
Seek public goods beyond what served to gain
The moral high ground only by the test
Of how far public feeling might be swung
To further private ends at the behest
Of corporate interests. They ensured a bung
By large donations at a timely stage
In her ascent to power, like those among
Her media moguls who’d been quick to gauge
The turning tide and just as quick to seize
Their chance giving her the full front-page
Vote-winning treatment. No surprise if she’s
So often, decades earlier, to be found
Head bowed, hands clasped, or silent on her knees
And inwardly to double business bound
Since destined now (she knows) to be the one
Who’d teach them all those principles of sound
Soul-management that father had begun
By laying down for the concentric spheres
Of chapel, home and shop. That’s why she’d stun
The global commentariat in years
To come by taking as her guiding light
A household politics where all frontiers
Like those set up, as if by natural right,
By Keynesian economists to flag
The private/public line would then invite
Her stock response: just take your shopping-bag,
Compare the goods and prices, figure out
The best deals you can get, be sure to tag
All items carefully, and then you’ll flout
That whole perverse doxology that held
It vulgar simple-mindedness to tout
Such homely wisdom as a lesson spelled
Straight from the shopping-list. Think too, since it’s
A thought one’s irresistibly impelled
To entertain, how perfectly this fits
With everything she’d later do to show
The male establishment she’d grabbed all its
Macho prerogatives so there’d be no
Conforming to the usual stereotypes
Of womanhood. Hence her resolve to go
That extra mile and silence all the gripes
Of those who said she’d lack the element
Of grit or sheer cold-bloodedness to wipe
Her conscience clear each time her actions sent
Some workforce home, some taskforce out to kill
And be killed, some directive to torment
The consciences of those who did her will
And knew the human costs, or a quick nod
To the Joint Chiefs of Staff that they should spill
Enough blood to convince the awkward squad
She saw things their way. Hard not to conclude
That something like her father’s vengeful God
Of petty-bourgeois rancour made her brood
Incessantly on old wrongs and project
The retribution onto those she viewed
Either as foreigners whom you’d expect
To act like that or ‘enemies within’,
Like striking miners. These comprised a sect
More dangerous by half since their chief sin,
In her book, was the kind that tore apart
The bonds of nationhood and laws of kin
By the fifth-columnist’s satanic art
Which, for her father’s daughter, always loomed
Largest of all those lessons at the heart
Of Judaeo-Christian culture that foredoomed
Some prophets, tribes or nations to be sold
Into captivity while others, groomed
For the lead roles in scripture, join the fold
Of God’s own folk. It was her father’s voice
That echoed in the history they told,
Those old blood-curdling tales, and in the choice,
When ratings slipped, to take her chance on war
As a well-known restorative. ‘Rejoice!’,
Her victory-message said, which meant: ignore
The near one thousand combatants who died
On both sides, and especially the more
Than one third of them drowned or fried
In the old crate Belgrano even though
The best intelligence placed it outside
The danger-zone and sailing on a slow
But steady course that took the ship far clear
Of anywhere its feeble guns might blow
A hole in her grand strategy to steer
The nation back onto the course of true
Blue values that transcended all such mere
Facts of the matter. So, if we ask who
Should, in the longer view, be held to blame,
Then working out which guilty foot the shoe
Fits least toe-pinchingly is not a game
Best played by asking simply who did what
In legalistic terms that link up name
With deed as if through some tight-fastened knot
Of straightforward agency. This fails to see
How few of the coordinates that plot
Our own life-histories are such that we
Can trace them back to origin and just
How many of them, subject to i.d.
Checks of a stricter kind, are such as must
Be put down to some shaping power that far
Exceeds the furthest bounds of what we’d trust
As hitched securely to the guiding star
Of unique personhood. One standard way
Of taking this is lowering the bar
Of moral judgment so that we can say,
In any given case, let’s just allow
That tout comprendre, c’est tout pardonner
Since, everything considered, we can now
Much better understand that it was well-
Nigh inescapable she’d turn out how
She did. This means, should we elect to dwell
Intently on it, that his favourite line
Of pulpit-talk, his images of Hell
Mixed in with thoughts on how best to combine
True godliness with making all you can
Along the way, must lead us to assign
Her to a cool bit of the frying-pan
And not straight to the fire. Yet that’s to stretch
Forgiveness to a point where it would span,
If need be, every human vice and fetch
Up some fresh mitigating circumstance
With which attorneys might begin to sketch
A case for the defence. Then they’d advance
The cause of all whom adverse fate had left
With few of life’s advantages, or chance
Had thrown into a childhood world bereft,
Like hers, of everything that might have saved
Them from that home-and-chapel-sanctioned theft
Of what, for others, all too briefly staved
Off adulthood’s arrival. We must track,
It’s clear, some middling course between depraved
Since all-excusing attitudes that lack
The blame-idea and others that accord
Zero allowance to the way things stack
Up early on and right across the board
For those whose chief misfortune is to get
Themselves born into just that unexplored
Since deeply unappealing social set
Where piety assumes the sullen guise
Of lifelong forced sobriety and yet
Offers sufficient leeway to devise
Some handy tricks of conscience. These would leave
It free to pick and choose which rule applies
In cases where adopting a naïve
Or literal view of gospel truth could pose
Large problems, as when trying to deceive
One’s business rivals, leading by the nose
Some unsuspecting customer with cash
To spare, or keeping colleagues on their toes
With memories of how matron used to thrash
Them back in public school (such were the joys!),
Or thinking it good policy to trash
That ship with its four hundred men and boys
Rather than let a UN peace-plan wreck
Her god-sent chance of war to quell the noise
Of those at home who’d get it in the neck,
Like those at sea, if only she could fix
Things there as easily as from the deck
Of a Class-10 destroyer. These were tricks
She’d picked up unawares yet by a keen
Observance, Maisie-like, of that which sticks
From childhood through the sundry shifts of scene
In later life when lessons in their use
For ends of state will turn out to have been
(Since, so we’re told, the physical abuse
Was kept for shop-girls) the most lasting mark
Our Grantham grocer managed to produce
Beyond the chapel-door. Soon she’d embark
On the long quest for what might bring her power,
At last, to spread the message of his dark-
Side Manichaean gospel with its dour,
Self-implicating knowledge of how sin
Must shadow every act and thought of our
God-haunted lives. If all great crimes begin,
As some would say, in childhood’s auguries
Of innocence undone, who’ll think to pin
The blame down finally as hers or his?
Christopher Norris © 2014James B. Nicola
The Sheath
At last he has the time to think about
to whom it had belonged, and what it held,
before it came to him, and then his wife.
He’d given it to her happily when she
admired it, once. In it she kept her emery
board. Before that, his slide rule. Before that,
who knows? A nacre-handled letter-knife?
A pair of manicure scissors? A pocket
level for a carpenter? Who cares?
He does, today, and wonders, as it sits
empty, high on his hutch, as on a throne,
a senile emperor, fine leather lined
with time, once-brilliant beading fading, but
if not enjoying the sinecure of
retirement, quiet about it, and calm.
Twilight is the Meetest
time for desultory assignations
like poetry, where the question of which
came first, chicken or egg, falls, superseded
by this response: that from every day springs forth
the dark, as from night, light. Which is both birth
and surrender, give and take, at once. Although
the western, younger faiths trump living in
the present, as the eastern override
fear of the Last and wonder on the First,
poetry’s spun in that faith where You Are
left-right in the moment, aware enough
of swallowing nights and half-digested days—
and vice versa—to make the piquancy
a sweaty-sweet unbearable rash, a near-bursting
dread to cherish and sigh for with one pen
as brush, chisel, polishing cloth, scimitar, and olive branch
brandished upward toward the winking eye,
out and down to the world, and you, for ever.
James B. Nicola © 2014
Heraclitus
He said that of the four, Fire
Was first, the font of Everything,
Though he too looked around and saw
Only Earth, Water and Air: that is,
Solid, Liquid and Gas;
Fire being ephemeral, and rare.
He had no microscope back then.
Who taught him how to look and know
The furnace inside every atom
Ablaze with energy
Inextinguishable?
That even crystal, ice and diamond,
Were far more hot than cold
Just in their being there?
That fire was
The word
Yes
To almost everything?
Someone
Must have given him
The Word!
And if In the beginning was the Word,
The Word was Yes,
And Yes was Fire.
James B. Nicola © 2014
Marmorata
St. Peter’s, The Vatican
marmor marmor marmor
clackle ackle ack
scuffle squish scuffle uffle squeak
And myriads of modern feet
shod in modern ways
circulate in semi-stanchioned chaos
in general ungenuflective
randomly reflective
on centuries-buffed, unsentimental stone
red ropes keep them amply apart
clackle ack
jackets, sweaters, sweatshirts
guarded over arms
draped over shoulders
tied around waists
might be forgotten but not like souls be lost
marmor
assorted straps and cameras
slung unslung and slung
commemorate the singular occasion
click
The multitude pounds lightly
their gasps and murmurs
soft and sweet, so they do not
drown out the omnipresent echo
the sanguine susurrations of the stone.
marmor marmor marmor
What buried bishops whisper through the marble?
marmor
What hard soles
tickle unread chiselings
now all but worn away
on coffin lids?
clackle
What smaller-personed sneakers
in innocent abandon
impressed irrespective of the times
slide and scrape?
squish
What agony or token
of what untamed apostle
is being
trampled on
only to resound
uffle
in what artists’ conglomerates of
what sundry styles that scream
out secrets through the silence of the stone
marmor scuff
for a quarter hour’s stroll
of a millennium?
marmor marmor marmor
clackle ackle ack
scuffle squish scuffle uffle squeak
James B. Nicola © 2014
Jim Newcombe
The Rise Of Leviathan
‘From whose womb did the ice crawl forth?’ (Job 38:29)
Who will say when or how the waters came,
when or how or from what atmosphere
the apparition of the poisoned waters came,
hefted aloft by its own dark bulk and splendour
from the pressure of its own abysmal bowels,
mounting to unleash
such labouring swells as bore the lush green world,
churning tons of carbon, mineral waste,
the sheer black glass of the larval hills liquidated
and dissolved.
Where on earth was impregnable
when out of the realm of ice and snow, as up from the kraken’s cave
came hell and high water,
the earth’s hymen breaking in hysteria,
the sea-valve cervix breaching the contractions?
Envisage now
the coastal barricades burst, the buildings skittle to the sea;
tall towers crumbling like labyrinths of sand.
Insurgent groundswells on the far horizon borne
yawn open, clash
down, fly through Tokyo like a stone
through glass, make a void of Washington.
London lies like shattered crockery
to rasp and scour beneath the solar wind.
Waves uprising like quavers on a bar-scale,
the pluck and sweep of strings fortissimo
and the overthrown kingdoms of the earth
like wasp-grubs to a bath of eels,
gorged in mad thrashing as
the fast waves, frothed and twisting, flash and coil,
thrust landward, spit disjecta
and the wild hash hail.
Who will remain to tell which way or how
the ocean bucked and reared, mashed with tidal slicks of gore,
the dark sky slit with rapid spunks of lightning,
the corpse-tide laid bare.
Lurid squalls pluther and slub from the navel of the world,
a dervish that radiates darkness,
gravelling the wreath of the ear of the wind.
Pillow lava havocs the ocean troves.
Replete coffers disgorge
the centuries-long laden junkets of spoil,
such plundered trash of scintillant booty –
the scattered cosmos of their sovereign crowns
never countervail the damage
in the telling climate of our time.
Now somewhere, beyond the limits of the land,
cleft hunks of crystal density
slogger in the billowing fetches of dark sea.
Metallic ice-bluffs, sabretoothed, wield out of the chaos.
Thaw-creaking earth-crust ripped clean through;
ridge-push; slab-pull; the breath of the tsunami
altering the matrix of creation; a watershed dis-
placing the great tectonic scales.
See the diaspora of unfastening ice dislodge
the mammoth energies within the mantle,
the swirling iron of the polar dynamo
whose jousting balances foreclose our ruin.
With hackles of coasting ice-crags
this apparition of the spectral waters comes
to violate in its virginity.
The stalking glaciers snap and collapse,
the rubble of the ages indistinct.
Moon scruples the massed, vast tidings;
the abrasive grind, hiss of scalding ice-blocks
covenants with no man.
Raking, shivering repercussions mist
and vapour, the steep and hacking waves.
Such gouged offal condemned
through corkscrew slippage and welter
to the bone-littered belly of the deep.
Each peninsula dunked like a sop in broth
into the unfathomable, out of true interior.
It is the ground prancing like a marionette.
It is the ice wielded and snapping in the melt,
the turmoil of the bleak tide roiling,
the massive ice-plates cracking and colliding
and the risen waters the risen waters
the hydra-headed, self-consuming waters
rising –
Jim Newcombe © 2011
Doing it for Charity
Aficionado of good will
Helping underdogs
Sour tastes ruin gesture
Impressions’ moral fogs.
Always some obtuse star
Corresponds to global tears
Liquid grasps concern, relief
Avalanches in arrears.
When ‘idols’ act unacceptably
They’re shrouded by gold aura –
Bigwigs zip up criticism
In jiffy-bags of Pandora.
“People in desperate need” –
Tomorrow – “savage brutes”;
Building cycles of discontent
Napalm for heated disputes.
Below charred bodies, captions flash:
“Win a week in the Fjords” –
Casual suffering in laps of the press
Patients barking in their wards.
Potholed roads, unfunded troops,
Incomes balanced on loan –
If weights of past deception lift
Charity should start at home.
Daniel North © 2011
James B. Nicola
But Poetry Is Metal Work, In Fine
Is the legacy the bowl or its contents, particularly
what it contains when empty? That’s the thing
with literature, it isn’t what it is,
but what it is not, and evokes, that is the legacy.
The jewel-laden bowl looks different
to every century, every generation, and to each
dazzled glance or focused pair of eyes,
the ears that hear the echo of the hammering
in Byzantium, Drumcliffe, or up and down my hall.
James B. Nicola © 2010
Ashok Niyogi
Mizmaze
across the road
they have started a takeaway
for tiny Narcissus flowers
“big appetites welcome”
the mitzvah of Mithras
is muffled in the scent
of autumnal flowering
of roadside trees
that impart shade
and unexplained allergies
dictionaries fall apart
like a life hitherto sequestered
by intrepid dreams
the imaginary roles
of nobody as a somebody
like a short penultimate syllable
before the sleeping pills take hold
from the colored center
of small white flowers
fragrance unfolds
Alistair Noon
from “station / street”
5. Tobacco Industry
A rustle in the bushes
as a patrol van passes:
a Vietnamese woman
hurries through a mass burial
of untaxed imports,
her expiry-dated permit.
8.
Baseball-capped, spotty and hooded-topped,
you, with your Pitbull vanguard and Alsatian at the rear,
walk where Stalin’s artillery growled, and fear
sank its teeth into the legs of the shelled,
refugees in their own cellars,
and for seven days all exercise stopped.
9.
Down where they founded the city
in the years of chivalry and pillage,
the weapon popes banned as the Devil’s –
for its seventy-kilo recoil –
competes with the air pistol and rifle
in a local Moloch’s shop window:
quality has always sold.
11. On an East Berlin Street
Where the Roads Department pulled down signs
to put up the new, you pad your way, not
quite steadily, thin-jacketed in Spring.
Cousins once removed ask what fibres you wove,
knots you tied and threads you broke,
want a list of all your complicities.
The specialists who looked in on you as you lay
in a waking coma – so they diagnosed –
want to know what you were thinking
but can’t quite believe you remember anything.
12. Two Tenements
On one, disrepair has skimmed first letters
off “ream”, “utter” and “ilk”.
The spatter of grenades
sticks to the grey cornerstones.
The second, peach-tinged, frames a glass door.
Fixed above is a bright-lit sign –
seaweed which predicts a shore:
“Events”, “Consultancy”, “Design”.
13. The Operation
Where the anaesthetized face once stared back,
rented mesh keeps strollers
out of the next block: from the top floor,
chipped furniture dribbles down the chute
into the skip to be driven off
with the drilled and extracted kitchen walls
whose contracts the new owners won’t extend.