Lynn White
Lynn White was born in Sheffield in 1945 and now lives in north Wales. Her poetry is influenced by issues of social justice and events, places and people she has known or imagined. She is especially interested in exploring the boundaries of dream, fantasy and reality. She has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net and a Rhysling Award. Find Lynn at: https://lynnwhitepoetry.blogspot.com and https://www.facebook.com/Lynn-White-Poetry-1603675983213077/
Gaza in Fall
In the rain of the rockets
there’s no water.
Metal rain.
In the rain of the rockets
there’s no sunshine.
Smoke rain.
Black rain.
In the rain of the rockets
there’s no life.
Death rain.
Life ending rain.
Death without life rain.
In the rain of the rockets
there’s no hope.
Deaf rain.
Death rain
Death refrain
…………..
Ground Force Gaza
This poem is an update.
I wish it wasn’t.
The original was written in 2014.
I didn’t expect to write a sequel,
but here we are again.
One hour to leave
carrying what you can
knowing everything you love
will be destroyed
behind you.
Who could do this?
People could not do it.
Could not do the things they did.
Soldiers.
Things in uniform obeying orders,
yes sir no sir-ing their way into oblivion.
They could do it.
They would do anything, if told to.
Humanity suspended or cuckooed.
Killing machines, destroyers of dreams,
burying them in the rubble with the bits.
With the bits of bodies,
the hands and the feet,
the breasts and the balls.
Things in uniform.
Daleks of death.
They could do it.
Maybe if enough things die
they will stop their slaughter.
Maybe if enough things die
they will become extinct
like the dodo,
the stuff of legend
like the unicorn.
I hope so.
©
Michael Wyndham
A Night In January 1991
You found an abandoned notepad,
and inside, a poem penned by
you titled ‘The New Crusade’.
It is dated 17th January 1991,
the night ‘Gulf War One’
exploded live via CNN.
Memories of the evening return:
the glee of your father’s fantasy
of the restoration of conscription;
his vision of you marching Arabian
lands bedecked in Desert DPM
and rifle. Your mother, heckling,
revealing his TB-fakery to dodge
the Korean call-up in a conspiracy
of flu, gin, and a bung to a ‘bent’ GP.
Your brother, allowed to stay up
late to enjoy the show, jerking
his Game Boy as if conducting
the bombing on screen, while BBC
news anchors praised the accuracy
of B-52s blasting their targets.
Michael Wyndham © 2022
Alan Weadick
The Workshop
When the heat miraculously did make waves
and shadowless twos and threes of things
I didn’t want to climb or scald on,
the workshop with its underfoot murk
of machines and tools was an eye-rest.
I rarely saw a car deflate itself to a fuming
stop inside those breeze block walls but I did believe
the smoking kitchens of some squat city came
to cool their heels there: More than one
Bain-Marie reclined in grease-stained aprons;
up-ended potato-peelers sang their lowest notes, at a push;
fan-blades lay like a rainforest plane-crash;
cold-steel canopies were lava-blackened.
And my father made his own weather:
inside, through an elephant’s graveyard
of scaffolding poles and un-walked planks
the sparks from the orange flame shooting
from gloved fingertips illuminated an underworld
reachable only by way of his black-masked eyes.
He did not need to pick apart what he had on his hands
to master it, completely. As he lay the torch down
and the blue flame sighed at our feet
the storm that had passed over, as they all did,
left us silent and sweat-stung in its wake.
The cauterised scar on the mended machine
mirrored the smiling lips that would emerge
from behind the mask into that idling future
I was careless enough to wish for.
This poem first appeared in The Children of the Nation: Working People’s Poetry from Contemporary Ireland edited and introduced by Jenny Farrell (Culture Matters, 2019)
Alan Weadick © 2019
Phil Wood
Paying for our Heritage
That African mask, painted with ochre,
threaded with hair sucking on bones,
its lively chatter of jungle tones
ghost the gilded themes of this tour.
The shadows ink across splendid
portraits. Those Gainsborough ladies
in genteel gardens – water lilies
and roses – lives slavishly scented.
This crowded cafe bubbles with chit-chat,
a broth of varied voices. We’ve paid
for tea and homemade cake. I check
my ‘Diary of a Country Parson’.
What sugared past do we consume
and trust in our comfortable rooms?
Elysium
I hear the bellow from the mother tree,
the farmer’s field a grid for deadly seed,
those profits keep our children hunger free.
I hear the bellow from the mother tree,
the profit man harvesting city greed,
this wonder feeds our minds with mutant breed.
I hear the bellow from the mother tree,
the farmer’s field a grid for deadly seed.
Phil Wood © 2018Phil Wood
Aberfan
Out of the corner of my eye
I spy a girl chasing a ball
spinning down the sloping streets.
The terraces thread the cwm, glisten
a rosary of hope. Through the rain
ghosts of truant boys hurtle past.
Their hair’s wetted coal-black; their eyes
water weighted, near blind;
they chase the girl pursuing her world.
The wind is a miner whistling tunes
out of habit. The shift’s over –
the mine sparkles a bracelet of ponds.
These ghosted boys, their molecules
shimmer in watery lungs: they’re out
of breath. The girl splashes puddles.
The body of a miner is sixty
percent water. It’s less for wives.
And when I knock on my gran’s door
I hear the slowness of her tears
soften my words. I unwrap gossip.
Her boys are long departed.
Rainy Days
Clay clung to her boots -‘ta-ra’ she heard, ‘ta-ra’
and she saw them all marching proud and then
the whistle blew. She heard their panting fear
running until beyond the trenches her boy
anonymous, wedded with wire, unblinking
across a conscripted land. With poppy-red
lips she kissed her soldier boy and bedded
the mud with memories, gunsmoke clouds
hurried away.
Phil Wood © 2016
Phil Wood
Dowd’s Wharf
The mud’s a grey unhealthy skin
where the neap tide lingers. This Usk
is never clean, but its mud gleams
as if the stars have found their nest
along with trolleys and rusted drums.
This river wharf is colder than home.
He calls it kedging, turning the ship
around. It’s brimming with scab coal.
He says there is a pretty Usk
frothing with healthy trout. There’s mud
in Birmingham, but not like this.
Where’s the sea of tranquillity? I ask.
He shrugs.
He has mud hands like mine.
================================
Pneumoconiosis
A mistle thrush pecking a stone
that is bone white. The river’s drought
a blistered thirst that mirrors mine.
The Welsh dresser displays the dust
of Portmeirion plates and there’s Gran
cutting a slab of marble cake.
The Oakdale mine is hacking black lungs
to rags. All hear that rasp and know,
but still the kettle steams for tea.
Grandad, whiskered, mouthing air
as if a fish with pulsing gills.
I want to share my slice of cake.
Phil Wood © 2015
Phil Wood
Accidents Happen At Sainsbury’s
From this joy of rain
the melch of leaves oozes
a mushroom soup between my toes.
I thumbs up.
You can’t sit
‘less you move your foot.
The tribe of corvus croak their prayer
and I unfold my eyes across the tarmac
to where a roadkill trifle waits.
I thumbs up.
Would you like fil tered cof
fee
or a capp u cino?
A Merveille du Jour blends to lichen skin.
Pools of vermilion spaghetti nest
beneath the Quercus and I want to pee.
You’d prefer soup?
I thumbs up.
Street Theatre
The Slav gravitates to a corner
beside the bins, looking up at passers-by
and mouthing crumbs of memory.
A pantomime fish poisoned by Cardiff air.
The glare from McDonald’s gathers coins
and fools into the mime, and though
time drifts like dandelion seeds
into mud pools, I play the Samaritan.
Phil Wood © 2014Michael Wyndham
Kate Sharpley
1.
Caged days without charge
in a cell stunk out
by the sweat of the coppers
as they pummelled me
with fists and truncheons
until the mirror view was a horror show
yet, the sergeant grinned
there’d be more of the same
if he saw my ‘ugly anarchist face’
on the streets again.
2.
For I was expected to be agreeable in grief
and stood proud before Queen Mary
as she doled out medals
for my dead father, brother and lover
who were expected to forever
be ‘chirpy Tommies’ cheerily
dying as bullet-full tangles
mangled on miles of barbed wire
with thumbs up and smiles
for King George who’s busily
anglicising his German titles.
3.
So I flung the medals back at the
waxwork face of Her Majesty crying:
“If you think so much of them, you keep them”
But England entrenched in worshipping
royalty gasped: “outrage!”
for the blood trickling
down the Queen’s cheek
was thought a more shocking loss
than the blood of the dead
fathers, brothers and lovers
drowning the fields of Europe.
Michael Wyndham
The Great British Ritual
Sir Ranulph Fiennes jogging solo
to the North Pole, yet forever
unflappable in the fight
against brutal frostbite; for
he’ll fretsaw necrotic fingers
and soldier on to his goal. As
schooled in salad days at Eton
or in the Royal Scots Greys
or when Bren-gunning Omani
‘Commies’ for the Sultan’s medal.
O Sir Ranulph! you were installed
by glory to Britain’s hierarchy as
the saintly icon for the ritual of
rigid adherence to futile endurance.
An inspiration for the nation’s heroes:
for here comes ‘Bear’ Grylls festooned
with the Scout logo and trumpeting
Baden-Powell’s motto for foiling
the immorality of the idle. For he’s
prepared to rebuff smashed vertebrae
and being strapped to a backpack
of a cannonball; for he’ll conquer
Everest in record summit and
be welcomed home by a TV deal
and a seat at the table with the royals.
Michael Wyndham © 2014
Julie Whitby
Rotting Fabrics
Menacing green apples,
heartless skin of lover
smooth as lychees, unperturbed:
tinned. Wayward images that
wander. Will not form a
purple sea: crash their symbols,
froth and foam restore me,
hurl a stormy wonder –
no red lace petticoat
lies empty. They’re nibbling at
my verse. Menacing, sour apples,
tea-bags, coffee-skins of lovers; matt.
Lights
Ugly orange neon
cranes its neck forwards like
some stout, middle-aged hag
hunting for that bargain
in a dismal church hall.
Or an unwanted girl
at a dance: the dance of the street
where all other eyes flash
that quick serach,
knowledge of desire.
Girl, hag, neon, street:
all meet in me, each instant.
Holy Rose
Snow Rose of Macedon
Rose of the morning,
Rise from your radiant bed.
Let the Rose Mass be said –
the white rose kicking heavenwards
as did that rare Teresa of Avila
who danced in ecstasy
before the altar.
‘Unveil white blossomer’ commands the sun.
‘Daylight becomes your candid nakedness’.
Now by the candle’s flame we see
the white retiring Rose en déshabille.
Her petals part, revealing what’s to come,
Bright as that birth star over Bethlehem.
Snow Rose of Macedon,
Rose of the evening.
An Oriental Eye
The oven has an oriental eye
which looks beyond its squat platitude –
dirt-encrusted – I never noticed that before.
and how far does this eye see?
Just to the cobwebs and the pipes?
Or beyond them, through the wall
that’s waiting for the builder’s paw,
and over the gulls who always king and queen it
on the roofs that hedge in our longings,
even to the dream-encircling sea?
So does it stare compulsively out,
out of its narrow window, as I am prone to do?
Since only then may its dingy fate
dissipate,
and a sky glamorous, spinning with clouds who
could be anything,
anyone, and are free,
enter in
Cherchez le prince en ciel
Did you play with those magical cards as a child?
For what we don’t receive be thankful:
the oven has no right of reply.
Julie Whitby © 2014
Ben Willems
IN AREA C
Custodians enclose, confinement is commonplace
Ceilings of concrete, zinc, canvas and cave
Country of origin crumpled on cellophane
Compulsion scrubs up cleaner than change
Consider three complexions of creation –
Construction; Coercion; Cultures of childbirth.
Cramped between continents, clichés are chariots
Cain cripples Abel, cousins, compatriots
Cosy as cameras clinical catalyst,
Carving the census, Caesarean checklist,
Clamp down on chemistry’s chance companion,
Crows in the canopy circling carrion
IN AREA C
Conquest came; saw; cloned condominiums
Crowning hill-scalps like off-world colonies
Claimed descendants resurrecting centimetres
Customised maps, compressed chronology
Cable and calculus speech miraculous
“Choose place of birth in place of extinction!”
Cleverest thing it can clot cognizance
Certainties branch like advice from a croupier –
Cryptic injunctions stubborn oracular;
Clue’s in the creep to the thermonuclear
IN AREA C
Conscripted defences. Chicanery, legislative
Clauses. Security, of course. Conservation.
“Complainants: refer to the contract – Terms and
Conditions apply. Terms: you can have your cake
Conditions: we eat it – until further notice.
Call witness C. I beseech you stick to the facts.
Cry wolf with extreme care. Extreme care.
Cause of injury, we know from previous cases
Could be self-inflicted. C, did you ever suspect
Cracks in the victim of a suicidal nature?”
IN AREA C
Character building curriculum of buck stop
Classifies peace with pacification. Cue:
“Can of worms” on every fractious occasion;
“Coat of arms” – seductive, necessary – now
“Come to terms” more the scrupulous witch-finder
IN AREA C
Cusp of an epoch; twitch in the cosmos’s
Curtain of centuries, scenes to challenge
Captive, comatose, prick up curious; scare the
Crap out of lock stock hierarchies, are you sitting
Comfortably? Wretchedly? In your fortification?
IN AREA C
Consciousness coils and recurs incognito
Clearing its throat of a stuck fait accompli.
Cools off. When the brain cells are too over-
Crowded, choked with culprits getting off scot-free,
Corrosively racked, screw-balled deciphering
Charades of control. Eases back. Draws deep
deeper
Centres: in the heartbeat of beginning. This
Can’t be undone. Only cleaved on the surface.
Cut from its bedrock. Siphoned away, inch by
Cubic inch. Only clawed out mechanically
Crushed under falling masonry, suffocated when
Crucial to archaeological research. Buckled
Concentrically, empirically rubbished; only
Carried through the wreckage, a voice inescapable
IN AREA C
Countdown corridors echo diplomat chit-chat
Cash crop prospects, tectonic fundamentals, as we
Cross now to our conflict zone censor and discuss in
Clipped vocabulary: How beyond reproach is a blue chip
Client? How advanced is the carbuncle of theocracy?
Ben Willems © 2014William Walters
But Woe Unto You Who Are Rich
The words of the prophet speak forth plain enough—
Their meaning we all understand.
Submitting to God is the part that is tough—
We’re stubborn and flout His command.
We add house to house and we join field to field
Until we’re alone in the land.
Injustice and bloodshed—the wild grapes we yield—
Bring judgment: Our wall will not stand.
Our churches are filled now with smug, greedy people
Who sin in the face of God’s grace.
A cross rises up from the top of each steeple.
The symbol we might well replace:
We’re called out to challenge our base human race,
But taking a businesslike view,
We’d have steeple needles with ample eye space
For souls of the rich to pass through.
William Walters © 2014
D.H. Wheatley
Desecration (empty pages)
all these empty pages
collated and solid in hope
worthy inked words would
be dug into them
tattooed forever
with a meaning and purpose
I bought you because I need you
you will be my canvas
in which great ideas will be documented
you came to me lined
with parameters
but I scribbled and tore at your methodical appearance
I ripped you away from your brethren
you are mine
you will always be mine
no one will ever see you again
after I am done with you
I will lock you up like a dirty secret
in desk draws with soulless unpaid bills
and sordid sex mag posters
this is where love letters and personals
have gone in pure
and if ever released
have become a tainted piece of me
trivial
withdrawn of any humanity
that is because
it is just a piece of paper
D.H. Wheatley © 2013
Jane Shay Wald
EN ROUTE TO BUENOS AIRES
We’re one row back from first class seating
I smell the food others are eating
It strikes me as a metaphor
Dividing line. The rich. The poor.
I’m rarely on the struggling side
Does this tar me with a false pride?
As our country loses wealth
It’s everybody for himself
The poor are made to walk the plank
The rich are running to the bank
The Christians think they own this place
America, where my white face
Protects me with a life of ease
While Christians fall upon their knees
To curse god for our president
Whose birth they claim’s not resident
RECOLETA CEMETERY, BUENOS AIRES
A cemetery in the middle
Of the city, big and little
Crypts above-ground, on their roofs
Angels drive out spirit hooves
Of Satan while the lowest carving
Cost the bread of hundreds starving
Cherubs fly through man made towers
God and man, uneasy powers
Wealth divides in our land too
The word of god and Jesus who
Our politicians preach the Word
Totemic in their pagan herd
As third worlds master internet
Our nation sinks, pressed by our debt
And as our GDP declines
The GOP smugly opines
That Christian values will create
A faith-based nation born of hate
Above each bed a wooden cross
With Jesus comes our freedom’s loss
Jane Shay Wald © 2012
Abi Wyatt
Mother Hubbard’s Lament
The old ways are dying out
and we, I fear, must fade with them.
Nobody now makes homemade pie
so the blackbirds sing and fly free.
All the wells have run dry
and the world grows dim
since the candle-maker’s
passed into receivership;
and, though the jolly pie-man
peddles well his wares,
at the fairground no one buys.
Now the pipes have fallen still
and the fiddlers have ceased;
all the tarts – either burned or long stolen.
For want of more honey,
the pale Queen weeps
and the Grand Duke numbers his dead.
While the pussycat dines
on the startled owl,
Big George and Little Willie are indicted;
and, in the counting house,
as the numbers stack up,
the old King puts a pistol to his head.
Abi Wyatt © 2011
Petra Whiteley
Ars Gratia Artis
I. ars est celare artem
This word that I will not say cuts through my fingers,
through my hand. Only through this cut can flesh be felt.
The following of the rip will not lead to belong, just to find
a question, not an answer. Never an answer, words not to be.
II. caret initio et fine
Jesters in the rain dance on the spikes, the noose of words
around their veiny red necks, butcher’s hooks, unattended,
regardless
they will nest that rope up there, keenly, crying ‘faster!’.
Air for the fish.
III. de fide et officio iudicis non recipitur quaestio
The priest has sharp teeth, the rain hits the glass. Every
thing is yours.
Confess the f(l)ame[s], set your[self]house on cold fire.
In those flames you can be God of every[day]One. The Rising
of Poe-T, victorious, with mouthful of corpses. Affix-nose-coccyx,
entrance, this fuck chosen. Cli(que)ng fantasy, hands-as-one
clapping oratorium.
IV. acta est fabula
Now, we must talk of anaesthesia of sex, of clocks tender rotating
quietly, churning the ashes. The masks of criminals worn, eyes
unlying. Burning to beginning. Mid-air ladder perspective.
We must talk about the artifacts of departures of waves, the powder
of sky, the lines of stars, the rush of big bang. Cuts covered, the warmth
of blood, the apparition of life. Blasting the white sheet,
cover my face. Cover it tight and cover it now.
Quiet! We want to look into our souls! (Thomas Mann)
———————–
Rainsticking
I kept walking from the town, the place
of wind and restless mouth; those were empty pockets
of breath and their words nothing but hell from a shotgun.
The clever(mad)ness of men
tongue-full-wagging, throw-scream throwing.
I was thinking things to be silent about.
I was thinking about thick water
and breath with no harm.
Colours with which dreams give swing
to fools flashing bright gowns and lonely skulls, well,
I’m done with that now.
I was thinking of where to whisper, where to make its cold grave.
Under the leaves,
under the water…
Still, there is no rain; there are no more deserted shadows
to push the steps on the gravel to some distance anymore.
I want to scratch a song, a piano in a dark room will do.
A song in which to be silent about everything that should
be and should have been said to a stranger at the bar,
where truth stares at you when you finish that drink,
and that idiot dream with its violet sky mocking,
that rainstick sound in the empty skull left behind.
There in the bar where strangers know you better
than your God knows you, whom you know
better than your mother.
Acres of Solitude
No one in the story. Does there have to be someone, anyone? Or can it be, just A bar with a bass crackling from shaded corner above the red, worn musty carpet. Must someone listen to it? Can it just linger and be? A song that’s never left. A smell that rings in the sleep. A peculiar light, a renegade witness.
Does it have to be like tea, squeezed animals swirling and sugar strained from red seas, somewhere within? Beating ant-hems of nations merrily, merrily. Nations, like old, loose pidgeons, darkeningly drunk, excreating busy-ness.
And those who are given to the other side of the story so reluctantly, so unwillingly, are moving so very, so very slowly. They are nobodies like you-me-us. It takes infinite move–ment of snooker balls to make the clock go and that, that sad, sad song to find its last note. A history of miles spent breathing flying words and bodies, left behind like they were already dead when they were just belling, contemplating the planes that weren’t moving. Destinations undeparted. Firestealers in amnesia, in ennui film sweat, sea acres of solitude.
A cut between a place and a mist that clings to walls. In the dark it looks prettier. The lonely. In the clothes on the floor, there is some hope growing within them. It is a rising steam, a mirage. Defeat of the day clothes…it came with birthing blood and residues of struggles, the expulsion tax. A tide, a glow. Now this story is not so great, so it opens a can of dreams.
Washed out in the rain, that cold, tired rain spinning in the drain.
Petra Whiteley © 2010
Christian Ward
Rebirth In The Age Of ID Cards
I have been condensed,
boiled down to less
than zero, shoved through
tubes, dropped down
onto petri dishes fed
to machines with hungry
mouths. Woke in a garden
where the trees are made
of 1’s and 0’s, apples,
from pissed-on manifestos.
I walk, think, wank, shit
and sleep. I hear scratching
when I dream, find new
objects in the morning:
credit cards and passports
with a name I don’t recognise.
Sometimes I like to dance:
my hands will leap up
and my body will fly through
the air. Perhaps I will soar,
see the hands that mould,
that give me inoffensive
scenery instead of life,
bloody and raw like hands
cut with smashed glass.
————–
Anthem for Obedient Youth
With no offence to the obedient
youth, I would like to rip off
their generic faces and turn the
knobs of an etch-a-sketch
to produce some variety that will
throb in the electric undercurrent
of our society. How I would love
to pull off their hooped earrings,
hoodies, tracksuits, fashionable
crops, retro glasses and everything
Hoxton-esque. How I would love
to strip them bare and let them
redesign every inch of their pathetic
selves. And burn, burn the media
priests that dominate the theatres
of their heads with pointless shit
and spoonfeeds them a heroin
of gossip and noise to ensure
subservience. Then I would let them
walk through the streets and watch
them tear it down, tear it all fucking
down.
And it will be beautiful,
oh so fucking beautiful, my friends.
——————
The Conservative Poets
Their words are hollow,
trite. Snatched from Marie Claire,
Cosmopolitan. Who gives
a fuck about whether an avocado
gets you fat, or a man changing the oil
in your car. Held up to the light,
their words are blank; unlike the ones
labelled ‘other’ or ‘underground’.
Theirs is like the lump found on an x-ray:
hungry, raw, growing.
Daniel Wilcox
Shell Casings
Oh
“Love and forgive”—
Out-worded mouthings,
Spoken platitudes of artifice,
Only discarded words—
Empty shell casings;
Now
More verbs eject from the barrel
Of the battering rifle
As steeled bullets
Fell god’s enemies who return
The religious favor;
Yes
Turn the other teeth,
In the snarl of the Sermon
On the Mounted gun,
Revenge by silencer,
But even the scorched stones
Cry out against
The barrel of the juster
Jest of the god-blessed—
Ritual fount of all
Red-tided history.
Daniel Wilcox © 2007
Daniel Wilcox
The Dog’s Bite
The Tali-banned dog fighting
But America permits the dog-bite
Partying of religious Afghans
In the fanged gamble, their moneyed
Heroin poppies up, jagged blooms
Clawing the world market
Leech flowers blossoming deep, needle
In ‘Vein’ to others circusing the world round engulfed,
And the propped legislature votes
The blooded zenith
To execute apostates,
Ah well so sick
And punish blued wives who left
Hell! For several thousand bills, fighters
Can get out of jail free cards
So much jawing teeth
Dogging our worn flag-budded tail.
Daniel Wilcox © 2008
Gwilym Williams
On the Feldherrenhalle Steps
God, you are my refuge into eternity.
Sophie Scholl – last words (attrib.)
The munkle and rattle of an early Munich tram
lurches me suddenly
back
to sombre meditations.
Awake! from dreaming in your comfortable inner space
you brother of dragons
you companion to owls.
Hesse and Bukowski explored their themes:
living (or existing) in the present
is one.
In the practical world empathy may aid digestion
when dining with your enemy.
Rationality will not save you.
Something important had to be done
here
apart from maximising efficiency.
I went and got the data.
Re-examined the reasoning.
Un-positioned the present.
You can never say never
and you can never change
human nature.
One of them told me it was all a Boys Own adventure
dreamed up at the Hofbrauhaus
when they tanked-up on Teutonic philosophy
fuelled by an addiction
to frothy beer, potato stew
and Wagner.
A kind of cosy camaraderie around long tables.
And then handily placed
that brace of proud, crowd-facing lions
mounted atop the steps
waiting for the up-and-coming orator.
Glorious inspiration hung with bollocks
the size of grapefruits.
They should fall off according to Newton.
To Hell! with the all-seeing eye of the agnostic.
I turn and see the girl holding the white rose
standing in a slow dolorous light
frozen vacancy in her eyes.
Is that the rumble of thunder?
Strange amphigory of circumstance!
Exiguous memory:
We will not be silenced.
We are your conscience!
Subversion to the proselyte!
God, you are my refuge into eternity!
Gwilym Williams © 2007
Gwilym Williams
Attending a Poetry Reading
Nobody understood it really
understood what it was
really all about
although some of us had heard it
once or twice before
and one of us
had even read it several times
but still
nobody understood it
and when I pressed her
about it
pinned her
to the bar
with a kind of pathetic poetic gaze
she held forth
that it was all a stream
of consciousness
and that I should have known
that
what went unsaid
was meant
and was indeed
more
than implied –
since
you’re something of a poet
too
or so I’ve heard
she said
Gwilym Williams © 2008
Richard Wink
Kizza Me
Bare feet
warm black sand
vile delirium tremens
The aubade burns
streets disproved.
A plain Jane saunters
mystery
engulfed in Bermuda smog
Poker
Unable to talk because sunlight
doesn’t operate underneath his
refulgent nostrils.
The Prince, a manipulator who
himself was a burden to the house
that raised him
picking up perplexed fairies
who showed a bit of leg
before they sniffed stardust
though you couldn’t see the
magic until you parked your
wallet and opened your
misshapen ardor.
She sensed opportunity, you
were obedient. She
could recreate something
fanciful on the budget
of a shoe string
Richard Wink © 2009
During the Recession
The empty guitar case collects coins
its quarter to noon
and there is no marble sky.
Above the bust of a queen
swings on a sign.
A dog on some string
snarls
near the harmonica bearing man
who got so drunk last night,
his tongue is scarred by teeth marks.
Seizure
Father, son and preacher
blazing clicks of high heels
on the pavement
met with fiery eyes
sordid and graceless.
Ungrateful for the loose change
misery justified.
Richard Wink © 2009
Doog Wood
from Old Men Forget
79
Through one eye. Lafeyette lays quietly.
He does not nail it in place but the end
of th’longer paddle
is tapered and rounded to fit
the bottom of the pot ‘I said,’ exactly
the same shape.
The room is full of smoke, faint afternoons
‘damn, leave me be,’ both handles are
flat, soft
made with’at drawing knife so the pine
won’t dig, ‘dammit,’ when coming
into a curve.
There is a cold beating, Lafeyette, hard
glistens at the pit gazing I take
water, warm
from the bucket & pull off my clothes
& lay along the cool counterpanes
beneath the shed.
83
Then I went by slowly, and round behind
the barn, as I followed, she sat
deeper & graver
looking-up at lathing set a-pitch
and the window, open,
sixteen or eighteen inches hewn.
She would not think the full-moon full
unless she saw it in the water
and ‘only after
was it’ chinking on the back
like a ‘red spider’ falling
on each chestnut stall.
We’re on the outside of outside, fenced
from the garden to the hills
like the bells –
Ringing. Ring. Ring.
feeding now,
walking no regular rhythm.
76
The second again: by now it was full
whispering, chortling, crowing whippoorwill
between iron
beds & lamp unlit & still I face another
seam, withered, and lay through two half-inches
behind my head.
Across the floor, towards what hangs
from a nail, he catches himself up, no longer
any quiet, clean
linen – but th’poor shuffling now beneath
soaked cloth where he has found it and
begins again.
The bed planks creak, and I can make her
bare feet slow, not shuffling, not
stifled, her
voice not whispering, ‘git awn t’sleep,’ and
the twisting and grumbling sound
which will not grow.
107
Later on, in the kitchen, John sliced
not honest cornbread, not even
biscuit, ‘I hain’t
heard him say nothing,’ and we sat
in two chairs, with my back
against the wall.
‘I thought you said,’ it was as though
she walked straight through the sound
her feet, naked
leaving the voice ‘quiet.’ He took
another plate down, his hands
busy again.
‘It was the boy,’ I watched him go
over to th’sink and prepare
to wash, ‘that’s
what I’m talking about,’ her long
fingers and I remember Geneva, how
‘here, I’m trying to explain.’
115
After we packed the mule & positioned
the felled old things, brought the lace
turning
in that quiet, constant scene, leaning this
way about the smooth, thin body
through the door –
‘What good,’ we continued, with used calico
pantalettes, smooth prim braids
and steps
down with the smell rising like
music – only, ‘stillborn,’ and complete
only, ‘that’s a fact.’
‘Now you,’ Lafeyette said something, ‘quit that
now,’ & we passed the pasture gate –
‘listen,
are you,’ through John’s eyes, & it looks
back at me, fading, at that broken angle, that
cat’s eyes do.
Doog Wood © 2008
Michael Wyndham
Harry’s Firm
The shot glass hammers the bar –
Our court all-rises for Harry
to determine the list of in or out of favour
Billy ran but is considered a lad; a query
as to Harry’s health, now John tops the chart
of faces we are to banish
But Mickey is advancing hierarchy
he’s clowning & tickling his way to a seat
at the helm. He feels the squeeze
of Harry’s arm-swell pilfering flair
from the rank and file –
“Mickey, you’re just like I was at your age”
Michael Wyndham © 2008
Petra Whiteley
The Hours
Hours … the falling mirror,
It is so cold now, the pale silver
sign I’ve swallowed and smothered
within. There is only stillness
of jet-black untongued utterances.
Aloof incantations, slaughterhouse
Requiem. It’s close – glitter in the omens!
My hands are outstretched. I’m flesh-
Folded in your faith. Consuming me. You?
I grip your face, feline and distant,
Waiting; unfaced. Effaced in blackness;
Vision penetrated. Hours … grow silences,
Birthing images of you. My fear is you.
I am. Murmurs in the last, broken sentence
You’ve breathed out beasts of better times.
Hours – I long to touch. They turn and itch,
my pulse with locked wings. Nothings. It’s
you who burns me through. I rise and rise,
watching you, watching me. Turn away.
Pull.
Communion Switch
You’ve brought a friend home, shy smiling.
He keeps saying hello, keeps on switching
the lights on and off; won’t eat the red fish
given, his host’s eyes – glimmering, he looks
away, searches through old Christmas boxes
for a shelter, malachite fluid-filled. Drained.
Passersby, pass. Blessed donations,
transfusions of the small copper tinklings.
Lung waste. It’s fun to pretend to wear shell
thorns, one hand nailed, one eye watching
for spectators. Shouting slogans, take
your pale mannequins – strategically placed
mystical signs. War and peace, communion beat –
drum and blaze, getting drunk, getting stoned.
Revolutionary annotator crushed under, sniffs glue
from emaciated hands, shredding the dead, gravel
lines blasting the ashes, children in junk factories.
Fainting formaldehyde funk flower assembly. Father
and mother on the coffin-watch. Silent. Angel spells honey,
s-w-e-e-t. Dirty words in the gun. Do nothing, do fuck all.
Smile, pretty. Less dangerous to be so. Rage and loud noise.
Sucking on oil, on your laptop. Yes, it’s them. Not us.
Buttons, we pressed. The veils of the dead flap in the wind.
Their hands so ghostly outstretched for mockery of fuzzy
rats. Shaved heads, prayer beads, emptied minds, nirvana.
Ink numbers, laser-read, sold two for nothing at all. A penny.
Bargain. Death sells, smells just like you. Say no hello.
It’s goodbye. Lights out. No sense. Switch it. Flood’s behind.
Eyes in the ground
The moon with the broken spine
of its sleepless hare lashes out
fast and hard, its liquefied light
screams at me –
the black blood putrefied silence,
bed spilt, last breath peeled naked.
Gliding blue with no sound
(no symphony, no sadness)
Rebirthed,
transformed.
Is it innocent?
Is it free?
It
pricks, its dry
sticks sink in, flesh stings,
exposed
in the cold. It digs a hole
deep within skull, takes
the surrendered bones
of departed warrior line,
tied tight skin on wheels
its fuel – annihilation,
colour red. Its pulse. Ablaze
in open jaws.
Eyes in the ground, watching
multiple lips flickering sparks,
the lies. Do not scatter them
around these silvery flesh things.
The Blackout
The furniture has never been moved,
the clock burnt faults within.
I.
In this blackout
someone will forgive you
(some of) your flesh.
The Chosen
autochthonous bond –
the placenta of the annihilation
cut lengthwise, drowning reality. (?)
Repeat
the wide arch of spit
whilst sketching your pomp
till you feel inside.
II.
Choose equilibrium
of agony relapsed
during the protracted years
of appropriation
of certain crepuscule,
always empty and tight-drawn
around the skull.
Breathe yourself in.
I hear
the sermons
are cataclysm loud.
III.
The crack opens the rehearsal
of this unspeakable ruin,
the stock-exchanged pain –
the rape of others
untalked in speeches on scaffoldings,
the streets incontestably bright-dressed
in elation of this long, long march.
What is it in you? – the oscillation
of the delusion and affectation
of barren mumbles, the clung of cheers –
the carnival of habitual cannibal in you.
IV.
The paradigm
shall (not?) pass the hungry – the resurrected
hounds, splayed bloodily across the inverted
amulet of crossed wrists.
In stillness there is the spatial decay
the ornamental purpose of absorption.
The filter and lament of Self behind
the uneven walls of the depressed
house-fronts. The trenches.
So fasten the seatbelt
of the ending – the perfidy
on the sludge of your tongue,
unrestrained and oozing fractions,
institutionalised stick up –
the natural selection
of bête noire. The raptorial expression
engraved onto the marble faces.
It is merely the result of living quiet.
Lee Whensley
Capitalism
Capitalism fails when there’s nothing left to take,
When everything we lived for is discovered to be fake –
Was everything we killed for just a big mistake?
It domineers to commandeer – its property at stake
Creating a dependence on the products that it makes –
Capitalism fails when there’s nothing left to take
It hums a tune to placate you as you work for its gain
Then in hegemonic harmony it buys out local trade –
Was everything we killed for just a big mistake?
Homogenised and standardised- free thought down the spout
As idolatry fills TV screens of hedonists devout –
Capitalism fails when there’s nothing left to take.
A guise of stark normality that crumbles when it’s opened
Free will contained by wanton gain, but when the system’s broken,
Was everything we killed for just a big mistake?
Experience of convenience and lying through clenched teeth
The pretty packaged products that hide the shit beneath,
Capitalism fails when there’s nothing left to take
When everything we lived for is discovered to be fake.
Lee Whensley © 2009
Daniel Wilcox
a few blasphemies
Little boys and fat men
Fall pell-mell from the sky
Toadstooling shapes
For the earth scorched,
But we Americans assure
Such weapons are
God’s droppings to ‘u.s.’
But hell to pay for Iran;
We’re waterboarding but
The Persians are blazed to blame;
Orwell’s Blaired novel doubling
Comes to mind,
The true ‘blastphemy.’
The Winged Ones
Overlooking the City of the Winged Ones
At blooded sunset distant in the haze
He stood on the skyscraping angled roof
And lowered the stars and stripes of the clawed eagle
Watching its stretched flapping shadow
Flit about the darkening roof out to the edge
A bat on the prey over the slate gray world
Not the dove of the olive branch he so imagines.
Black Light
My eyes pressed and I slipped
in under her fleece cloth
in the desire of my mind.
Her eyes glowed iridescent
in the blackness of herself
in the darkness of the house.
She spoke a southern accent
from carved ebony lips
from a northern white city.
I spoke with unprejudiced hint
from separate loneliness
from a dusky existence.
I wished to be able to protect
against the loss of innocence
against our blotted culture.
She was black light intent
against the vulgar glare of war
against the shadowy white.
Daniel Wilcox © 2009
Concerning this 500th Anniversary
Of John Calvin
And his Tongues of Fire
Not the tongues of Acts
Those of mercied news,
But Gehenna’d tongs
Of Calvin and Geneva
Firing the green wood,
So hard to blaze
Down to Hades,
Slowly, more the skin’s scorch,
Long sought end of Servetus,
Head drenched in sulfur.
And our god fell,
One of the casualties
Like the reprobate infants
Outside of Geneva,
With the sudden rise
Of a myriad of bats
Out of a dark theological pit,
The poisoned t.u. l.i.p.s kiss
In that Judas of nights,
A tongue-lashing
From eternity past when
The primordially hidden,
Instituted decrees
Blazed through Europe
With ‘help’ from Rome
And millions of saints
Slew for Jesus’ sake.
Our doubts abyss up
Like doctrinal vampires,
Hovering over a hellish cake
And the lowly clay pots
Fitted for destruction;
We drink the ‘vain’ dregs,
Not the loving grail
Of new wine at Cana.
But John wishes Michael
Had only been beheaded
Of his heresy of baptism.
What a shame…
1 Luke 23: 31 If men use the green wood like this…?
2 James 3:6 And the tongue is a fire. The tongue–world of wickedness–is that one of our organs which soils our whole nature, and sets the whole course of our lives on fire, being itself set on fire by Gehenna.
3 Acts 2:3 Then there appeared to them divided tongues, as of fire…
4 On Servetus “a crown of straw, doused in sulphur…The fire was lit. Green wood does not burn easily, does not roar up. It smokes and sputters, burning unevenly and slowly. And so Michael Servetus’ life was not extinguished quickly in a blazing wall of fire. Rather, he was slowly roasted, agonizingly conscious the whole time, the fire creeping upward inch by inch. The flames licked at him, the sulphur dripped into his eyes, not for minutes but for a full half hour. ‘Poor me, who cannot finish my life in this fire,’ the spectators heard him moan. At last, he screamed a final prayer to God, and then his ashes commingled with those of his book.”
Out of the Flames: The Remarkable Story of a Fearless Scholar, a Fatal Heresy, and One of the Rarest Books in the World By Lawrence and Nancy Goldstone
Daniel Wilcox © 2009
Go The Way of Democracy
It is time to go
to the people
to the polls
the way of democracy
Time to make a mark
speak our say
There is a window opening out onto the world
and we can pass
if we want
if we choose
into a brave new day
Choices opening wide
Men debating their truths
within the illuminated window
Only men
half our people have lost their voice
without opening our mouths.
Let us go
the way of democracy
the way of Uncle Sam
because it works so well over there
God bless the sound bite
the chad
Mr. Personality God himself
Let us make free choices based
on the empty words of men
on the flickering of icons
in depthless windows
on backlit surfaces
on the skin of thought
More voices lost
whose surfaces are not the shade
of men framed in the open window.
So many going without a whimper
through doors and chimneys
behind the light
illuminating our world
Maybe the wick in midnight’s glass
draws us forward
to hear the whisper of the people
the way of us I am
go
to hell in a hand made basket
the way of the world
the way of democracy.
Jacqui Watts © 2010
Ellipsis
Moon light flows stiff like iced rain
I am bathing in the clarity of the circular moon
but where does it flow too
where does the flow end and the story begin
assuming there is a story
Is it about the moon in her icy stiffness
Is it just words in the blood singing without benefit of tune
Are the words living or just from life cut
a little piece, a slice, a molecule
Is it misguided to search for too much meaning
in all this untidiness
Is it so wrong to seek a sense of life
in the meaning of words as they flow
haltingly from their clarity
its complete, complacent roundness
We think fit to translate the man
to banality, cutting him free for simplicity’s sake
but applaud without slightest irony the obtuse
empty complex of an emperor’s latest threads
Pull them through, along, thawed round and round
Where does it take you into
the maze where a fat moon shines brightly
bathing its own crystalline clearness full circle
like empty starlight in the channelled wake of a thought
thin and hollowed in the iced rain
Jacqui Watts © 2010