Strider Marcus Jones
Visigoth Rover
i went on the bus to Cordoba,
and tried to find the Moor’s
left over
in their excavated floors
and mosaic courtyards,
with hanging flowers brightly chamelion
against whitewashed walls
carrying calls
behind gated iron bars-
but they were gone
leaving mosque arches
and carved stories
to God’s doors.
in those ancient streets
where everybody meets;
i saw the old successful men
with their younger women again,
sat in chrome slat chairs,
drinking coffee to cover
their vain love affairs-
and every breast,
was like the crest
of a soft ridge
as i peeped over
the castle wall and Roman bridge
like a Visigoth rover.
soft hand tapping on shoulder,
heavy hair
and beauty older,
the gypsy lady gave her clover
to borrowed breath,
embroidering it for death,
adding more to less
like the colours fading in her dress.
time and tune are too planned
to understand
her Trevi fountain of prediction,
or the dirty Bernini hand
shaping its description.
Pyramid Prison
in detritus metronomes
of human habitation
the ghost of Shelley’s imagination
questions the elemental,
experimental
chromosomes
and ribosomes
of DNA,
reverse engineered
that suddenly appeared
as evolution yesterday.
her monster mirrors dark wells
of monsters in our smart selves,
the lost humanity and oratory
that fills laboratory
test tubes
with fused
imbued
genes
to dreams
of flat forward faster
distinction
to disaster
and barbarism’s
ectopic extinction.
this is our pyramid prison,
where all souls
and proles
climb the debased
opposite steps of extremism,
like Prometheus Unbound,
defaced
sitting around
the crouching sphinx
abandoned by missing links.
free masons of money and wars,
warp the alter of natural laws,
so reason withers
and wastelands rust-
no longer rivers
of shared stardust
in the equal symphony of spheres
in space,
filling our ears
with subwoofer bass,
definitive
primitive
medieval
evil
waste.
Helen Jones
Borderlands
You find the border suddenly, unawares,
It snakes through suburbs,
Attacks with its invisible line,
Spins you from one world to another.
I am born to the border.
One grandmother, stiff as a chapel pew,
Tiny sandwiches and pots of tea
With doilies. The other, fierce as
A house held together by sound,
Reverberations of another place,
Pans bubbling on stoves, and sugary pies
Baked every Sunday after early Mass.
School trains me to be English,
Cool, detached,
Knowing the cutlery for every dish
We can’t afford,
Sends me to London with words I cannot say
Knowing their meaning only from my books,
Pronunciation can elude my tongue.
A tutor mocks,
Received pronunciation slices
Like a sword,
Another border.
Language is slippery.
When I come home,
A sharpened Southernness infects my speech,
But slips away, the old language returns,
The slightest lilt, and our instead of my,
Our world is plural,
Theirs singular.
Old haunts are threatening,
The new are strange,
My flattened vowels fall
Like insults on them,
Each one a label,
Marking me out, not one of us,
Not capable.
They flatten me to match my vowels,
Some borders are always closed.
Native Soil
This is the soil that made me,
The blue-black soil of legends, myths
Built from the bones of men who toiled
To dig the coal and shift the lead.
The claggy soil of chapel hymns,
Of Sunday tea and male voice choirs,
This is my soil.
This is the soil that made me, the dry starved soil that formed
From blight and hunger, wasteful death,
Of wilted crops, dry breasts, women in rags,
Of men who dug with calloused hands
The pitiful thin earth and fled
In slave packed boats to other lands.
This is my soil.
This is the soil that made me,
The fertile soil where women worked.
And straightened aching backs in cruel sun,
Of skivvies up at five to light the fires,
Toiling with buckets up and down the stairs,
Of girls dragged out of school to factory gates
For twelve-hour days and dreams of hope long gone,
This is my soil.
It is not your soil.
Your soil is made of sieges and of kings,
Adventurers who sailed to distant lands
Piled up their wealth from plunder and from death,
Of hero generals who killed their men
In great and glorious battles
This is your soil.
My soil is made of poverty and death,
Of men who could not breathe and women dead
Before their time.
The Photograph
Winter’s black gobbling mud
Has gone,
Leaving us only dust,
A playground made of ashes,
For Tina and me.
Two little girls with prams,
We are not yet four,
Hands raised to fend off
The unlikely sun.
The camera makes us negatives,
White faces,
Colour bleached out gives us
Sepia dresses.
You look at us and see
The black and white,
A textbook illustration
Of a type, classify us,
Two slum kids playing,
File us in your mind
For future dissecting,
Use us to illustrate some book perhaps,
Bind us in a thesis that will bring you fame,
We are not real to you; we have no names.
Your alien gaze will miss the vital signs,
The differences which still assault my eyes,
Scream loud reproaches to me
Down the years.
One dress is slightly better,
One pram cost more,
One dad a tradesman,
The other is unskilled.
This lottery of birth pulls us apart,
My school is better, hers has given up.
I go to university, she to a shop,
Works hard for years, never earns a lot.
She finds out early, I take time to learn,
That lack of money always holds you back,
That you and those like you, will always see
A slum kid when you look at me.
Helen Jones © 2023
Paul Jeffcutt
Haunted Vessels *
Septimus Goring,
unlikely pioneer,
conjured a ghost-ship
that sailed over the horizon
nobody on board.
Rolls Royce and Mitsui’s
unmanned drone-ships,
sensor and satellite guided,
prowl the seven seas
echoing Marie Celeste.
Four-fingered Septimus
slaughtered the crew,
escaping in a lifeboat;
digitised Navi-tronics
terminates all hands.
* Septimus Goring is a character in the first publication of Arthur Conan Doyle, which dramatised the true story of the ship Maria Celeste, found abandoned in 1872. Conan Doyle’s story (published anonymously) was often taken to be a first-hand account of the mystery, and the name he gave the ship is the one that has endured.
Observances
Slicked with oil of spikenard,
cased in alabaster,
entrusted to St John,
Charlemagne, Pope Leo III,
looted from Rome
by the Duke of Bourbon,
exposed at Antwerp,
Besançon, Charroux,
Hildesheim, Le Puy,
and eaten by St Birgitta:
but the foreskin was fake,
avowed Leo Allatius,
head of the Papal Library,
for it had ascended,
alongside the Redeemer,
and formed a Ring of Saturn.
Paul Jeffcutt © 2023
Helen Jones
In Memory of Keith Bennett
His eyes, myopic, flash in light,
A challenge sharp as steel
Reverberates in winter air.
The world’s a blur for him, like me.
I see his grin,
Like a boy in my class,
Causes trouble, makes you laugh.
Each Sunday when we go to Mass,
He is waiting.
He’s horror-shrouded, silent-wrapped,
A name not said,
Heads shake in sorrow, children hushed,
The papers crumpled, hidden away,
The warning fingers raised like spikes,
Cut talk, mid-sentence, silence.
No one will say what has happened.
Spring sirens pulse through our estate,
Force into growth
New horrors from the darkest place.
Engines throb threatens, noise pollutes
The very air.
Children pulled in,
As if through locked steel doors,
Policemen’s gaze,
They too could be erased.
Old enough to learn his name,
I walk to school.
He is still there.
Eyes staring, paper curling,
Still waiting.
The building changes, he is gone,
Buried behind the bricks and lost,
But waiting.
I age to learn a mother’s grief,
She stands, a pillar, in rain and snow.
All clocks have stopped for her,
She waits through conmen’s twisted promises,
Through tiny steps of knowledge gained
And facts re-ordered keeps her hope.
Dies waiting.
Transmuted now, he is more than one,
Becomes all boys that we have failed,
The lost, the broken, the unseen,
Those we have silenced, overlooked,
He is all our failures,
All our boys,
Still waiting.
Helen Jones © 2023
Unending War
In a crowded back room, Grandad breathed out his life,
Where the bed and the wardrobe jostled for space
And the shouts of the neighbours sliced through cold air
And afterwards we checked his worldly wealth,
The half-crown in his pocket.
His boots dragged through the vicious mud of France,
His rations went to starving kids in Greece.
But when his duty called he went again,
Led by more donkeys to a forced retreat.
Pulled off a beach and sent to camp near home,
He marched his column straight down City Road,
Took church parade on Sundays, slept at home,
The fought again back, through the fields of France,
Sent home a picture with his eldest son,
Same regiment, same looks.
Another generation sent to war.
The Bocage was the worst, he said,
Couldn’t see them coming.
In between, back-breaking, road mending,
Face chiselled; lines etched.
By wind and rain
Called the boss mister, despised him all the same,
Biked round at night to light up all the lamps.
To earn an extra sixpence,
Never went to a Remembrance Day.
His whole life was a war.
Gained, at last, his country’s thanks,
His pension, not enough, he took a part-time job.
My gran, funeral-ready, all in black,
Pinned on her hat.
“Poor bugger was worth a new hat”,
She said.
Helen Jones © 2023
Gresford
The wheel is cleaned and polished,
Black soul scrubbed out,
Its perfect roundness hard as fact,
Made to contain the misery and death,
As if clean lines encompass all,
Make us forget.
Around it, history has been erased.
The signs that tell of struggle are long gone.
No clinging dust, no fear of sirens howl,
But clean square lines and gardens growing
Regimented flowers.
No black chained ghosts go tramping home from shift,
But workplace roofs that flash in winter sun
Leaving only
A few ragged memories
Shivering in the blood.
A derby match that day,
Men swapped their shifts,
A fairness from equality of fear.
No grace rewards the kindness given here.
They enter the strange lottery of death.
Mt grandad, blinking in the sharpened light,
Up from Llay Main,
Sent home to scrub away skin-scarring dust.
Men must be cleansed to board the pristine bus
That takes them to the maw
Of stinking death.
Resentment coils through generations,
Seps down the years,
An inquiry twisted like a malformed tree,
Courts blank, uncaring,
Records long destroyed,
Lives priced at nothing,
So the memory stays.
As a child I saw
Old ladies still in mourning black,
Scraping a life from the disaster fund,
My grandad, lungs obstructed,
Clogged with death
Struggled to reach the garden gate.
Bronchitis written as the cause of death.
All of these memories will die with me.
My son has never seen a pit.
Yet the bodies lie under Farndon, grandad said,
Bones of remembrance,
In a Cheshire village
Indifferent to death.
Helen Jones © 2022
Helen Jones was born in Chester and gained degrees from UCL and Liverpool many years ago. She is now happily retired and divides her time between writing, learning Spanish and making a new garden. Poems previously in the Amethyst Review and Poetica.
Fred Johnston
Fred Johnston comes from a family (North) of trade unionists and one of them a budding Communist, (he ran for the old Stormont as ‘Labour’ and holidayed every year on the Black Sea). His father suffered for his shop-steward activity. Fred’s family on his mother’s side (South) didn’t do much of anything and nothing at all political. He was ‘blacked’ in Dublin for unionising the public relations industry in the early Seventies – as his father warned him that he would be.
Testament
God brought him forth out of Egypt: he hath as it were
The strength of an unicorn……
My father said that, since I was still workless,
He’d get me into the shipyard. Harland & Wolff,
Queen’s Island, duncher caps and bicycle clips.
My grandfather was secretary to the East Belfast
Boilermakers’ Union – sons after sons in their tribes.
Well and good, all this; it helped if you belonged
To a Lodge.
Clan writ ran the length of the rails and the height
Of a gantry. I squinted at the grids and girders
Saw in them an infinite cartoglyph, read the
Signs and codes, the black mass of men herding
Over the bridge out of their Egypt, a treacle of black bees:
All of it an intimate speech of sorts, whispers through the iron;
A job for life, rivet and scalding steel, tea from a tin.
All well and good; a word in the open ear, keys
To a Jerusalem of water and iron. Not for me.
Not mentioned again.
Not spoken of, building arks like Noah, tossing them
On the waters like bread: no Moses to whack the tide in two.
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)
Fred Johnston © 2019
Michael Lee Johnson
Rose Petals in a Dark Room (new version)
I walk through this poem one step at a time.
I walk in a mastery of this night and light
my money changers walk behind me
they’re fools like clowns in a shadow of sin,
they’re busy as bees as drunken lovers,
Sodom and Gomorrah before this salt pillar falls.
In a shadow of red rose pedals
drunken lovers walk changing Greek and Roman
currency to Jewish money or Tyrian shekels-
they’re fools, all fools, at what they do.
Everyone’s life is a conflict.
They’re my lovers and my sinners
I can’t sleep at night without them
by my bed grass near that sea of Galilee.
Fish in my cloth nets beget my friends, my converts.
I pray in this garden alone sweat
while my disciples whitewash their dreams.
The rose has a tender thorn compared to my arrest,
and soon crucifixion.
It’s here this morning and this night come together,
where this sea and this land depart,
where these villages stone and mortar crumble.
I’m but a poet of this ministry,
rose petals in a dark room fall.
Everyone’s life is a conflict.
But mine is mastery of light and neon night
and I walk behind these footsteps of no one.
Michael Lee Johnson © 2019Colin James
The Professional Witness, Here Comes What’s His Name
In China I dressed in yellow silk
and timed my entrance with the wind.
In this country I wear gray sweats always
regardless of what the neighbours may think.
My service is just an eye to the memory.
There are clinical exceptions of course.
I have been working hard all afternoon,
resting now above a slight smoke rising.
My dragons are killing me.
Colin James © 2017
Colin James was born near Chester, England on the border of Wales in 1950. He now
resides in Massachusetts with his wife Jane and son, Liam. Some of his poems have appeared in Tsunami, Exit 13, Pica, Blazevox, Shades of December, Lunatic Chameleon, Cenacle and others. He has a chapbook from Writing Knights Press, Dreams Of The Really Annoying and another chapbook A Thoroughness Not Deprived Of Absurdity from Pskis Porch http://www.pskisporch.com/?page_id=139
Weeds Left
weeds left,
wilt in the sun
without work and water.
their seeds
are the wild flowers,
waiting for volcanic wind
and ash to fall,
so the fertile cinders
can colonise herbaceous borders
ending the old age
of selfish sediment
treading it down
in molecules of time.
another Marxist
dons his trench coat
and tears pages from his red book
planting the old words
of revolution
in minds of homogenous compost.
over-privileged gallows begin to swing.
bullets sweat in their chambers
waiting for the right heads.
Strider Marcus Jones © 2016
Antony Johae
Rome Poem
They say when in Rome do as the Romans
but I don’t see many to ape.
It is Bangladeshi boys who herd the foreign hordes
from street to touring bus or tout made-in-China souvenirs
– pietà, opener, pendant, purse –
through the melting day, martyrs to business.
When you wander in the streets or stop at crowded fountains
Africans off leaky boats hail you with their begging bowls
and bring to mind, in this excess, survival in far places.
Sitting in a roadside restaurant we hear an ill-clad man
on well-worn accordion play a joyful jazz;
his fingers race crazily, our feet take up the beat.
A black car draws up and a heavy man gets out;
he’s here to check the player’s papers – to move him on.
My daughter asks the waiter why?
“Romany,” he says, “thieves!” and puts down full portions.
Accordion shoulder-slung we see him pass along the street.
Without accompaniment we eat half-cooked pasta in tomato paste,
at eleven Euros a go – a waste
and wonder at such home-grown theft.
We’ll dance with the Romany
but we’ll not do as the Romans.
Streetwise
It is starting to rain.
Umbrellas are going up, but I don’t own one.
In Oxford Street they’re going home,
but I don’t have one.
I take cover in a station entrance.
The air smells wet, car tyres hiss,
and I shiver.
I settle by the river.
It is night and I lie under the canopy.
I stare at the stars and at the moon’s fullness
and wonder if there are better places.
The pavement penetrates my bed
of newspapers and squashed boxes,
and I shiver.
There’s a girl not far off in a corner.
She talks to me and I get up.
She’s running from a father who beats her.
She’s cold and says she’s hungry.
I go to buy her a burger with my last pound.
When I get back I find her in my sleeping bag.
She takes the burger and tears at it. A wind bites,
and I shiver.
We lie in the bag together.
She sleeps – I feel her warmth
and catch the heat of her breath.
I sleep too and dream of another planet.
I wake at first light and find her gone.
There’s a note: “Thanks – see you again.”
It’s going to be a warm day.
Green Line
“Only poetry knows how to marry this space.” – Adonis
1.
The combatants stuck their guns in the window spaces
Fired across the ruptured streets in spurts
At shredded curtains blowing in the pregnant wind
At pockmarked walls riddled by ancient war.
Then could be heard the blast of a car blown up
Shells shattering the dome of a goodly mosque
Bombs dismembering the church of Holy Maryam
And raining mortar fire insidious before the mortuary.
O mutilated city – where puffs of hateful smoke
Put out the puff of life, where concrete crumbles
And pipes ooze as if the streets were bleeding –
I see your people clinging to its wreckage.
2.
Along the paroxysmal line of mortal fire
Red tracer bullets marked the pungent sky
And detonations sent shrapnel searing into schools
Shops, banks, brothels, and the municipal museum.
Caught ships lay rusting in the rotting harbour
Nets hung torn and holed on the sinking quay
Sandstone houses stood gutted in the rubble
Columns, stained glass, and arrowed windows gone.
But now I see a woman in wedding white
Meeting her groom with roses and carnations at night
And multiple green springing from Adam’s clay
Among the ruins, quickened by the heavens’ ray.
Lebanon 1975 – 1990
Antony Johae © 2015Kevin N Jelf
Morning Star
“Morning Star!
Get your Morning Star” .
He holds a copy high
for all to see.
A whole constellation
under his left arm.
“The only national daily
owned by its readers”.
Chest swelling
with pride in his class.
With the zeal of a
true believer.
He kept the red flag flying.
But these are the days
before Thatcher.
Before the castration
of the Left.
Before the Red Giant
reached critical mass,
and his utopian Socialist dream
collapsed.
Kevin N Jelf is a 50 year old graphic artist who has lived and worked all his life in Birmingham. For Kevin, writing poetry is something of a compulsion. His subject matter ranges from the personal to the topical. He has previously been published in The Cannon’s Mouth Quarterly and Here Comes Everyone. His work has also been seen on The Open Mouse.
Kevin N Jelf © 2014Mike Jenkins
Slave Currency
Copperopolis :
once empire of that metal,
precious as coal and iron,
as Rhondda to one
and Merthyr the other
ingots, cable and sheeting
smelted and carefully crafted,
a valley mapped by workings ;
companies growing with every ship
whose flags whipped above waves
but manillas, slave currency,
seem like bracelets
or good-luck horseshoes,
coins which clasped fast
and weighed out wealth
30 manillas = one man :
from furnace-heat of African sun
to holds where they were rolled
and beaten and marked,
or thrown away like impurities
now these have lost their colour,
become dark as if tainted
by the hands that traded them
and resemble manacles,
blood staining away any shine.
( Swansea Industrial & Maritime Museum)
Mike Jenkins © 2013
Martin Jack
Incendiary
Any tongue needs a saviour.
You can’t escape the flash
even that shatters the architecture
of words, sculpts a savage city
flaking in the morning
aftermath of an incendiary device.
Gargoyles speak of it
in their masques. Words scratched
bloodily by an angry couple add
to their number, a hostile takeover
of spree killings immortalised
in stone that breeds new possession
an outbreak of sleep walkers
on the wrong side of the bed.
Soon you hear the pitter
patter of tiny daggers, unsheathed
as we stab with amplified thought
waves that leave a pinprick
on our souls brushed
with the ferocity of locust wings;
flying with the biting swarm
until famine intrudes into our face-
to-face coffee breaks where just
the espresso tastes warm and filling
and conversation is sandpaper friction
bantered till it hurts.
Dear Mr. Demille
Mr. Demille my happy font
is cracking. I can’t feign makeup
of brightest use for your reel
to reel. I might wear red
but arctic night lurks hungrily
underneath supressed in the bunker
of my frost bitten mind.
Do you dare to play auteur
with thoughts that croak crawl?
Can you tame them with the whip
of a clapper board scripting chaos
into a starring role where even
depression gets the girl, wooing
her with scissors and knives.
Mister, there will not be a sequel.
I’ll go undercover on release
no electronic capture but a fog
exchanged for my costume melted
into the cutting room floor.
While I live on as gas embers
one step ahead of the studio system
that would smother its audience
with your razzle dazzle
of my swimming with sharks,
suicides pretending a smile.
Mike Jenkins
In County Derry : ‘Masters of War’
We were singing ‘Masters of War’
at the piano in the classroom
the green-eyed Gaelic teacher
with her waist-long hair
and slim body a country
I’d come to know much better
singing together ‘Masters of War’
I stood behind her, voice rivering
deep below the strata of the choir,
at home now in the harmonies
in a strange land of pointed barrels
which had met me from the plane
where my mind recalled ‘Masters of War’
when the Deputy Head burst in
and spotted two pupils giggling,
he quaked and cracked with anger
punishing every one of them ;
pain made their voices louder
sensing the meaning of ‘Masters of War’
at the window an army helicopter
before it landed near the estate,
squaddies with machine-guns ready to fire,
to lift suspects and drag them away ;
houses where the tricolor was raised
none heard us singing ‘Masters of War’
and as long as that song lasted
we were marching, fists held high
like those of Burntollet and Derry City
who had stood against batons and bullets,
pounding riot shields with music and rhyme
the power of ‘Masters of War’.
Note – ‘Burntollet’ and ‘Derry City’ – scenes of Civil Rights marches in the 60’s.
Mike Jenkins
The Tree Council
{Tolpuddle, 1832}
Under the sycamore’s shade
our secret council gathered,
whispers joining the breeze.
We knew gentle blades would fly
just as others spread and grew
in the many places of the desperate.
The canopy enough to hide
our vows and our union,
our shares of the plough.
Six of us sat with promises,
knowing that to bend
was not to break in storms;
knowing that the masters
were experts with their axes ;
how easily resolve could be splintered.
There was a future, but no fruit
that we could reach and pick
to feed our needy families.
I spoke up, my brothers agreed,
each plan was a wind
to carry and plant those seeds.
Mike Jenkins
Settin Fire t Tescos
Orright, I wuz off of my ead
on drugs an booze
the day I set fire t Tescos,
the day it rained in Tescos.
I tried t burn off-a tags,see,
t scurry through-a securitee,
when all ell let loose,
yew’d-a thought I wuz a terr’rist.
I done nickin before mind,
goh away with it loadsa times:
but I woz sober an clean ‘en,
knew wha I wuz doin.
‘larms begun t ring
like the panic o wakin,
sprinklers begun sprayin
water over ev’rythin.
Me an some o the staff
wuz chokin with-a fumes ;
they soon catched old o me,
my ead a Waltzer spinnin.
I woz liftin clothes tha’s all
coz I carn afford none:
arf my benefit goes to-a dealer
an the rest is jest f survivin.
What ope f the likes o me
when there’s fuckall opportunities :
sirens blarin all over town,
theyer message – ‘Goin…. goin down!’
IDS ADDRESS TO MERTHYR
Well, little Merthyr folk,
subject of much media vilification,
especially that Sky documentary (you know the one).
This is your friendly ex-Tory Leader,
I’m sure you remember
the great things I’ve done.
No? Well,there’s……and……never mind!
I’m here to inform you about getting a job :
with haste, get on a bus!
Stand 15, it’s the X4 to Cardiff
only £5.50 return, price of a latte in London,
one stop Pont-er-prid…..don’t get off….no jobs there either.
Why not walk along that Queen Street with a placard
advertising your qualities, I’m certain
you’ll fit everything on it.
Or you could just walk into an office
and say, not ‘Gissa job?’……what is it?
‘Any work yer, but?’ (my researchers googled it).
So, it’s easy little Merthyr folk:
get out of your wheelchairs, cast off walking-sticks.
After all, I did it once, equipped with tie and handshake.
Mike Jenkins
No Worries, There’s A Royal Wedding!
Lost your job
lost your home
lost the will to ever sing?
no worries
cos there’s a royal wedding
lost your benefits
lost the holiday you planned
lost to pawnbrokers your wedding ring?
no probs
cos there’s a royal wedding
lost relationships
lost your head in debt
lost in dread when the phone rings?
no sweat
cos there’s a royal wedding
lost your pension
lost your kids hopes of Uni.
lost your life’s very meaning?
no hassles
cos there’s a royal wedding!
Mike Jenkins
A POEM CANNOT BE GRADED
A poem cannot be graded :
it is not a 1 or an A*,
or even a 5 or a U.
It sticks its two fingers
up at all examiners,
ultimately refusing to be dissected.
Even if you put it on the wall
it will come alive after closing
and hare down corridors.
A poem can have no criteria
to box in assessment :
emerging like a dream embodied.
It can be googled for meaning,
caught in the net and pinned;
but its words will grow new limbs,
so it jumps through open windows
into the rain, snow or sunlight,
tearing off its uniform as it goes.
Mike Jenkins
A BIG PARTY
S’ we decided to ave a Big Party
t celebrate-a Big Society
(it woz-a best way
t get on-a telly).
Better still, this bloke up-a street
woz comin back from Afghanistan
with a small wound on is leg,
so summin else t celebrate.
First time since-a Jubilee
and even them Thomases Welsh Nat’s
Welsh-speakers never turned up ‘en,
sayd they’d come along this time.
Ev’ryone ud be there cept Dirty Dick
number 69 done f flashin
all over-a local paper ;
if ee come ee’d ave a good kickin.
It woz all ready, booze n buffet
(even cold pizza f’r the veggies),
journalist from-a ‘Merthyr’ with a camra,
but telly coverin a Big Orgy up-a Rhondda.
Never seen tha soldier before,
is mam wore a t-shirt sayin
‘MAM OF A TOTAL HERO’,
ee limped bard, toasted-a Queen;
Thomases started complainin in Welsh,
s’ this eero Shane ee tells em –
‘Fuck off ome t wherever!’
They jest sayd -‘We woz born in Merthyr!’
It did get better arfter tha,
we ad a Big Cake we all shared
and a Big Larf when some o the boyz
pissed all over Dick’s garden.
Shane showed the kids is scars
an got to autograph a few girlz t-shirts;
it got barkin as the evenin wen on
with Big Drinkin Competitions.
Then Alan up-a road puts a dampener
on the whool bloody evenin,
stan’s on-a table, one foot in-a cake remains
an gives off t ev’ryone –
‘Big Fuckin Party!’ ee shouts is ead off,
‘yesterday I gotta Big News,
the Council’s on’y laid me off
an now I feel like a nobuddy!’
Shane yells out – ‘Yew should join the army!’
Thomases start singin ‘Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau’,
I done a Big Spew in-a drain
an a Big Party become a Big Pandemonium.
Notes –
Welsh Nat’s – Welsh nationalists
Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau – Welsh national anthem
Mike Jenkins © 2011
Tom Jayston
Blank
The words don’t come. The page intensifies in its whiteness
Like a freshly laundered moon, and I resent its purity.
The pen is obsolete, a poetical firearm with a critical
Shortfall of ammunition. Perhaps a sharp jab through the
eardrum
To allow the words to tumble out, or filter in.
The blood may at least stain forever the bleached
Sheet that scourges me, flays me with stark evidence
Of nothing. Nothing! It might even coagulate
In such a way that it creates a verbal universe
Within my evacuated mind. It disturbs me
To think I’m relying on the soul-blot of Rorschach.
The days, the planets, slide past.
Time has tiptoed away to a distant flaring sun
Fuelling a world of linguistic motion,
A place I despise at this infinity of now,
Where all thought’s directed toward the paper,
That milky rectangle, but the words don’t come
And my frantic hands, at last artistic,
Start to assemble an aeroplane.
A Losing Game
Melting into a mattress composed more
Of corpuscles, platelets, urea and sweat
Than fabric, stuffing and springs, I swat
The switch that kills the light.
A comfortable, blinding gloom settles gently
Over my coffin. I am alive.
The image that always drifts through my dark,
Death-cluttered mindbox is laughable in
Its irony: with nothing worth anything
Around or in me, I dream of winning
The lottery—not of what I’d do
With the money, but with the feeling
Of winning. I’m still alive, dying of sadness.
Your Prayer
You knelt upon the cushioned grass and
Prepared yourself for prayer;
Larks hung, dipped and fell, and in those
Avian missiles a deity revealed.
Pursing your lips to breathe in their wisdom,
An unending thought of embarrassment
For you addressed your own knowledge
But called it ‘God’
And the larks pitched, banked and rolled and you knew
The betrayal was not total.
The Piano Man
Black and white is too severe sans ascending gradation:
Fingers dance a rolling jig, spin a magical sensation:
A language alive in the digits alone speaking a sonorous tongue,
The music he conjures are songs never written, but songs that
can always be sung.
For the words we seek are form poor communications,
Verbal trash can’t replicate Antiquity’s vibrations—
Hammers fall on tense strings; springy smiles in the hospital
room;
Twinkling chimes, repeating rhymes bardiche through
amnesiac gloom.
Downfall
Before the rings round Saturn scarred the universal calm,
An infinite thing, if ever there was, held sway on an infinite arm’?
Before “Let there be light,”and the paths that afterwards were trod
The darkness whispered savagely, “If you must, let there be God”.
Tom Jayston © 2010Ash Wednesday Revisited
Because I do not hope to turn
– T.S. Eliot, ‘Ash Wednesday’
i
Come, turn again
to the blessed voice
while twisting
on the vacant stairs.
The bowl is full of ashes
honey sweet for the transitory hour
that strikes as a priest whispers
his first confession on the air
his conscience knee-skinned,
kneeling on hard marble floor.
After mourning God answers
the dry bones with life-
giving wind that blows where
it will in the quiet deserted lots
of the mind, redeemed
at the edge of the garden.
Ash marks the spot on the brow
where God claims his people.
On their face ashen crosses
unveil new creations
before the groaning rocks
who cannot pray
but bend their wills only
to God’s reign, awaiting
his mysterious timing
for the redemption of flesh.
ii
All our Lent Wednesdays
spent breathless in the pews
quicken to Easter birth,
the memory of sins shed
like skin in the shadow
of the cross, until finally spent
purged with the fasting
of trinkets for a time
forgetting ourselves in the light,
that swallows our darkness
and spits it out of mind
into the sea.
This is preparation,
smoothing what we thought
was beyond repair
as the blood beckons us
to redeem the dream
of holiness where trees flower
and dress themselves
in a white gown,
where we hope to turn
again to the Word within
and without, leaving the lost
heart at the cemetery gates
as we throw the ash
over our shoulders.
iii
Within, we listen to the Comforter
teaching us to be a cathedral
made of the supernatural fruit
of the vineyard.
Without we sing hymns
that rise upwards
carrying sacrificial music
out of our scattered voices
to the beating chamber
of God’s father heart.
There the Word rests,
whistling amidst the noise of men
praying for those who oppose
until this ash-tinted day
becomes theirs,
and the whole world turns
from adultery to sowing
the seeds of grace;
and smokes the blasphemous
names on its swollen belly
in the Valley of Slaughter ,
glad to be united
with the Eminence
as its prayers for mercy
shake eternal whispers
from the dust.
©
Martin Jack
Reformation
I listen for Him
out of hearing in the underground
spaces I breathe for
uprising space inside
where He arms me against
a speech of thorns
like a reformed army
newly fitted in prayers that bind
the undertow, spitting
out bushels of comfortless vandalism
with the speech He gives
before dark
an idea of my present future
my whole being rapt
to His expanse of torchlight
where positivity
must be
lived out
Martin Jack © 2007
Martin Jack
Charismata
(Greek: grace gifts)
We walk in the floodlight
ministry of the Spirit
who as matchmaker
points us to Christ’s glory throne,
our charisma to be
his body on earth,
shining Christ forth
in grace gifts that recover
enemy territory;
holy hands laid upon
a rebelling world whose sideshows
twitch for hype
tongues speaking to God
of groans within creation, urgently
waiting for the day of adoption
Martin Jack © 2008
Martin Jack
Red-Letter Day
Red mist leaves black bruises
on language, breathing rage in short-
hand until words turn bloody
sunrise.
Christ’s red-letters surround
the darkness with his redeeming blood’s
font-type baptizing the page
of errors,
a back catalogue of abuses
he recycles, pneuma descending
onto pulp diction until its rubble
breathes again in apologies.
Psalm
Disciple me Lord
graft your mission statement
onto my heartstrings, so they’ll strain
under the weight of injustice,
which wears a child’s face
tear-streaked with blood.
Tend me Lord
a young shoot still afraid
to stretch towards the sunshine,
nursery-bound to immaturity
which asks what about me
as friends mourn in open sight.
House me Lord
inside a praying church,
whose members go two by two
into dark, undiscovered corners,
driving out cobwebs with the rest of God
anointed in their hands and voices.
Send me Lord
where you will, alone and unarmed,
in partnership with faith
that guides me by its pillar
of light racing towards the prize,
New Jerusalem, your promise of home.
Martin Jack © 2008
Come
The open invitation to meet
Christ’s holiness, and be ransomed,
arrives almost unseen among
the junk mail, except by that poverty
of spirit crying for right relationship
on its death bed.
All that wearies,
historically,
Christ buries in his blood
that seals and completes each love-
letter from the Father,
born deeply in grace.
For those who open the letter,
his blood justifies as instruments
of spirit who intercede for creation;
the seeded works of committed
brothers and sisters planting laughter,
taming a slaughtered world.
‘Come, to new life
healing the sting of old ways
and appetites that leeched
you dry’. So –
the invited become the inviting;
to Christ’s smooth path
they witness
drawing out the near-sighted
into understanding,
ambassadors of human hearts
touched by God, testifying
with the ripe fruit of their lips.
Martin Jack © 2008
Martin Jack
unpersonage
to lie is to protect the social order,
to speak the truth is to destroy the State
– Custine, La Russie en 1839
silence is a medium
of State that wages war
against being
in the Soviet Encyclopaedia
substitutes buried men
fallen from grace
devouring them under a tissue
of undoings, truth bent and softened
until names were felled
the root filed to unpersonality
in the halls of temples
erected to clerks
while the Emperor waved
hearing no evil in the Russian climate
untouched by a soul
Martin Jack © 2008
unborn
I am figment
no voice on the operating table
mother don’t look down
imagine blood isn’t thicker than water
I am jigsaw
morsels of me line the laboratory
doctor detach and study the harvest
imagine you did no harm
I am speechless
on the pulpit choice is for the breathing
senator I couldn’t vote
imagine you never kissed me
I am outside personhood
the law is dismembered by forceps
judge are your scales silent
imagine you never brought the hammer
down on God’s creation
this town is wrong
in its slant way
streets speak bent
out of shape
a shorthand for crimes
and misdemeanors that only
discerners read, sensitive
to hotspots where the past
seeps through volcanic
written into the landscape
of names where evil grins
its face paint briefly
before melting in the light
Out of your Hand
mine is empty
cracked fingers stretch
out for promises
that overflow your wells,
named for posterity
when you chose deserts
in covenant, for dryness
to become laughter
and strongholds that grind
to become dust
you trample in victory
until I see and rejoice
over your welcoming shadow
all I need to drink
A Front
garlands consecrated in terror
fashioned its godhead out of virtue
Robespierre’s coronation at the Festival
of the Supreme Being
repeats itself with every new
salute from the tennis court
towards some fresh revolutionary flag,
its rouge bordering on misanthropy
as its stripes made themselves
a front felt on the back of history
engineering their lordship cult
through the ballot box
of mass graves, to the tune
of thunderous applause
The Lighthouse
set on a rock
Christ sweeps the bay
for lost ships draped in mist
our tears stained their deck
but his light called us homeward
warm arms flocking
around our wincing hulls
dry and brittle to the touch
airbrushed where the surgical cut was made
he broke the mist
clothed us in ribbon
the crimson of his righteousness
swinging from a lighthouse
at the right side of Father’s
storehouse of grace
pulling us from the hull-crushing
rocks which drown men
in static
our fragile stations
gifted an economy ticket
to glory, which cost us less
than a dime but cost
him an empty patch of flesh
the nails anchored for our rescue
Spencer Jeffery
A Still Life of Dead Flowers
He chose to pave his way
With no confidence to the grave;
Little money working long shifts,
Never paid enough to save.
He travelled by bus, rail and tube
Half his days to work eight hours;
A pittance paid to blood-red nails
And a crumbling grave, among dead flowers.
Spencer Jeffery © 2007
Simon Jenner
June 7th, 1980
The day we struck out stories from the fans,
my sister flirted with Corinne
who loved women, but later married.
Delingsdorf’s one lesbian commune
let one vetted man listen on moon-blanched throws
to Joni Mitchell, millennias of male oppression.
Cristiane, Corinne’s once straight sister, brought us
to twin her birthday with Sian.
‘We’re the Gemini in convex mirrors’ – she laughed
her laissez-countess height down on us. ‘We’re
monkeys who talk. Corinne’s Cancer,
she talks in between like fans. It’s time.’
She led us rumpling past once-ruby drapes.
The fans lay breathless as stuck butterflies;
one from the epoch of smoke-glass judges
inscrutably squint from behind the 12th century.
We trusted such fragility, sneezed the other way.
Drapes swayed, breathed out their dust-tooled legends.
She plucked the freshest with shell-blue motifs
never stilled to image or fixed telling. Sixty degrees
the sextile of opportunity; straked down
for disdain. Pinking ears to stop others burning.
Nose tap; right lobe: quiet; yes, after this charade.
Later – a flick – when men here left forever.
‘You both need to size down your words to your eyes
here. We’re tough but there’s a grain – like the –
parchment? – we crack along your promises.’
Past the sudden wing-patterned rug, flecked for the stars
burned ominous to umber patches, cig-flicking
grounding the fancy, she touched our fluttering down.
Who died young, breathless to her dark lungs;
led us down before the dope ceremonial.
Corinne’s high-bright cerulean eyes
glittered china from china pouring light gold.
All slowed to a sister’s arched eyebrow
lashed to her elder’s answer.
It kicked in, magnified; faces sprang open,
each blurred wrist-flick shook smiles
from us, tendresse from my sister. ‘Silences
you lead gently from their crude esperanto’
Cristiane spieled, ice-sober between giggles.
‘Now you can understand your English better.’
Simon Jenner © 2007
Simon Jenner
M Courtney Soper
He threatened sense with
his wet origami. It crumbled to a rope
of tattery verb-ends, frail precious papyri
and, from across a damp culture, a wyrd
of word hoards. No devout SAE ladened
his one-way song, addressed to
another feudal editor.
His sweep of us all promised
a heavy trapeze artist who doesn’t
care to be bounced back, but
kept forever suspended by a poem’s
hairline in a Damocles of undelivered
rejections, blithe of his words, struck
down and crumpled; kernelled by
a fist to the basket.
But I remember his disjunct name,
his emptying gesture, clearer than
most of my acceptances.
Does absence make his heart go?
His singularity’s a black hole
on ‘no’, where he’ll not
come down, not let me back
to haunt myself, where he found me,
but in a banquet of his choosing.
He’d find me at home to
his chop-fallen language.
Simon Jenner © 2007/8
Simon Jenner
March 6th
The toothed aroma of the municipal
smoke, a drift of early March, studs its soft
calendar of cumuli, this date snatched
from the park’s brief pulse of crocus strip
to the acid tenements you flung yourself from.
Three weeks on, your shivered life was a
pyramid inverted back again by radio, shy
showmen of expiry: a rag doll, lying there.
You, proud in despair and child, elude their
shrink, sound-bitten image of twenty-five
years of solitude; repeated.
This day I started writing, you were written
up and out, tape-wiped to a yellowing
memo in some head, scarred to a few more,
like the self-harm stripes your kids would learn
down reverb damp stairwells
spiralled out of them:
Emblem of eaten-out urban shells,
early eighties, my fade-out contemporary.
Now waged, a shout from your block,
I’d look out, ashamed of its gaunt spread
of stone-dropped silence
I’ve drawn to closer as I come near
lichen swart, a gulfed oval of brutalism
condemned by a flurry of social
engineers, to flay your children now
taking your station of blasted air
for their own site-bled vigil, as if
the blood was theirs.
Simon Jenner © 2008
Simon Jenner
Number Six
The O2 Dome’s moonstone
rises global out of the beryl zenith
of Greenwich, shadowing their white buggies,
like the bubble pursuing the novice Prisoner,
in the convex sixties, when you took it all in.
Blue-lit, it’s playing futures back to you;
strokes complicity, soporific soft-
strobed spends. It’s defected out of its time;
twelve steps to the muesli belt colour
of developments, to eddy in a bureau
of crashes, jittery with brownfield takeovers,
where redbrick recedes like gums.
My cousin collects me for the last family home.
The clinic’s ceased. They’ll no longer
re-tread his alcoholics. Concrete
overcoat them, someone leaked. The earth’s
yawning for it as they close in here,
meaning nothing but they’ve squared
the sphere and how it comes for you
out of nightmare and a force of decades
when we were playing. It’s settled, found
its purpose, how to breathe with playboy
millionaires; take all the oxygen it can dream of.
Simon Jenner
6 Somerhill Avenue
I’m voting in the imagined shadow
of my demolished house. Straight up
opposite this calico-faced school swaying
next to the developer’s scoop.
I smile my Janus of exile to these candidates
bright in their outdoor faces.
They’re suspect, next to repel
this brownfields landslide of themselves.
Just the doss-house held off millions.
Now the distinguished dove-grey blot
mirrors on the greedy glass spirals who
suck the shaven close salaries of London
to the square root of the old, lived-in spaces.
Too tight to wheeze my asthmatic child’s dust in –
a boy’s stride across the mahogany Thirties
landing would take in three pine lives, fresh sick
with new paint; ghosts of a future haunted
by being for ever cornered.
Here, I can navigate from the garish canopy.
Maybe I voted for time and them, complicit
to quell the tuxedo dinners; a shell of privilege
my years here occupied in a rasp
of bookish dust in the throat.
But I’ve elected the pre-fab vision,
my rosette-dismantled self packed with
these returning officers, who breathe
brickdust, swear in those who tear up
quiet quarters, and look out to a sky-hard
desert studded with giant noon-yellow locusts,
no history lesson to counter their coming
no shade to darken me with language.
Simon Jenner © 2008
Simon Jenner
1348, by St George
Edward conjured me through the
smaller trade routes: Portugal, Capadocia,
to displace the fazed sainted idiocy
of that elder Edward, who’d muted England
to a carapace of white submission.
It was a perfect leapt year. Plenty stalked
those commercial veins: spice, fleas, pearls,
diced wth the sailors. They spliced
the Death of course, tetchy in its
guttural progress. I was Edward’s double
purgative. Ever after, English teetth
bared a tighter rictus like a corpse.
Crecy was nothing on Poitiers, Agincourt.
I’d doctored your blood; who survived
the bubo was bellicose.
That’s not truth, but metaphor becoming
truth, down to the last yew-drawn
hung obsession, to the last regalia’d
corgi jest: you have the Georgian grin,
the age’s shadow of my sword’s length
whispering the rust of all saints militant.
You’ve made your death, you’ll have to lie in it.
Simon Jenner
Two Early Poems
(c. 1984/ Revised c. 1997)
To Hartley Coleridge
Your father’s Ariel, greyed alive to a stumpy
gossamer prodigy, you dreamed too alike –
the gifted negative of paternity near blinding.
If Samuel flickered at an incandescent pain of sleep
you feared the half word’s being blinked awake.
The shell haunted touch of one who rose at dusk
to drink, and trouble Wordsworth’s later dreams
or a knowing cottager, for conjured paper, pen to set
down the enchanted sonnet vagrancy of who you were:
the scribbled down, uniquely scribbled out child of poets
inspiring as a prototype four year old
with the child slowly pressured in your voice
knowing better, the prisoner of others’ great words
they’d no spell left in age to release him.
The Live Things
The live things darken. This, a pink room once
admits a greening shred of light to foliage the wall
and paraffin stove, pea green, its flame quibbled
to flower in blue, as though cornetted in dark wind –
– a world dimmed round – fingers piled blue fields of heat
for cornflowers – the whole creped round like a miniature,
in winter when the live condense and the living sleet
of breathing’s chilled. And curving in this portrait
glass we lie beyond the heat, a clove erect perhaps
twined with its plant; we see beyond and cold.
The twiner breathes: “I love you.” The dark’s a language now.
I cannot see reflections branded in its steel of sleep,
blue sculpting curls your chin and lip to mine
in this our tangled frieze of winter flesh made marble.
We kiss; but this is summer, and the strange things burn.
Simon Jenner © 2008, 1997, 1984
Simon Jenner
Cavafy’s Headstone
I’ve been sprinkled with death before,
a light covering, a spray of coffee beans
over me, my friends’ pre-emptive café talk
to strike my doubts and doubters dumb.
It tasted more of ground obituaries, as
myrrh might in coffee, and it slaked me, as
coffee never does. This anointing was better
than any modern headstone, which lack future
or feature, whose incisions crumble to hunches
more than the sand, or tiny porphyry chisellings.
It’s such a grain of talk at such tables speaks me
cleared away, by the white surpliced waiter
Obituary Writer
The fifth age brings obituaries.
You conjure its additive rhythm, scrawl
some bladed fancy of one, read some for an iron lunch.
Then your ancient phones, too close, he says, to the friend
whose forty years on yours, makes a hinge into the dark
of your ancient, merely twenty up, or a drop shelf to the word.
So he directs the quality to you, the editor.
Young, she’s your companion now, to walk you
so many deaths you write on brandy tinted evenings.
This is the life in eight hundred, you gnarl,
geared to her malachite stone commissions.
You start at so many boring old friends
she thought you knew, and you will, so
compact they are in your fingers, as she is in your arms
who steps you this way death; you’ve arrived.
Simon Jenner © 2009
Simon Jenner
Descended from a Line of Legs
Clank; his leg shows its metal
Down the pungent antiseptic corridor
Whose double once wheeled his flesh one to the fire.
Now he spawns comedy; these are Volvos,
Volkswagens swimming down aluminium,
garaged by his infant son daily and forgotten.
Veering to some vacant ward, he dismantles
Hs white consultant self to the buff
Paint and straps, to slow scars quickly examined
Stumped behind surgical socks, to a child’s Dinky rattle –
of himself years back, embryo memory of his whole.
but it’s his son who’s almost complete bar eyes,
scar tissue he sees to himself; eyes blind
to their blue-chipped reliquaries he’ll now return.
Smiling to anecdote it, he winces rising.
His son will keep missing and forgetting
till he’s only metal and memory. He’d
not see him seed in the father’s hangar leg
what burns him to flay, late, to the same titles,
limping preferments, not the predicted lyric scrapheap.
But the son’s legs are blocked out, own no magic cavern
to welcome his own infants. Flesh stops with him
who limps like his father with a pint less excuse
who fires steel and sterile children as a fertile offering.
Nicky Jones
Bankers!
When did we, the people
say banks could invest our money?
When did we, the voters
say councils could deposit our money?
When did we, the public
say our favourite charity could risk our money?
….in shares, in dares,
in who cares repositories,
in off shore safe havens,
in craven cottages leaking like sieves?
Spivs could do better,
put cash under the bed,
in lead, in gold,
in something solid and old.
The game’s up!
It’s out of the bag!
Fat cat directors carrying their swag,
are seen dragging profit home,
to shore up their upper crust,
while we are toast, at a loss,
you can be sure it’s going to cost.
Well, I won’t be gagged!
I want to gag!
This is a gag, isn’t it?
If it is I’m not laughing,
barfing all the way to the bank,
a think tank of bile,
spewing vile thoughts
towards the men at the top.
They have their eye on the Dow Jones,
are playing footsie with the FTSE,
flirting with the Nikkei,
as they size up the market.
We’ve been duped,
pooped upon from a great height.
No time for blame’s ablution:
Viva the revolution!
Nicky Jones © 2008
Michael Lee Johnson
Gingerbread Lady
Gingerbread lady,
no sugar or cinnamon spice;
years ago arthritis and senility took their toll.
Crippled mind moves in then out, like an old sexual adventure
blurred in an imagination of fingertip thoughts.
Who in hell remembers the characters?
There was George, her lover, near the bridge at the Chicago River:
she missed his funeral; her friends were there.
She always made feather-light of people dwelling on death,
but black and white she remembers well.
The past is the present; the present is forgotten.
Who remembers Gingerbread Lady?
Sometimes lazy-time tea with a twist of lime,
sometimes drunken-time screwdriver twist with clarity.
She walks in scandals; sometimes she walks in soft night shoes.
Her live-in maid smirks as Gingerbread Lady gums her food,
false teeth forgotten in a custom-imprinted cup
with water, vinegar, and ginger.
The maid died. Gingerbread Lady looks for a new maid.
Years ago, arthritis and senility took their toll.
Yesterday, a new maid walked into the nursing home.
Ginger forgot to rise out of bed;
no sugar, or cinnamon toast.
-2008-
Harvest Time
(Version 5 Final)
A Métis Indian lady, drunk,
hands blanketed over as in prayer,
over a large brown fruit basket
naked of fruit, no vine, no vineyard
inside−approaches the Edmonton,
Alberta adoption agency.
There are only spirit gods
inside her empty purse.
Inside, an infant,
restrained from life,
with a fruity wine sap apple
wedged like a teaspoon
of autumn sun
inside its mouth.
A shallow pool of tears starts
to mount in native blue eyes.
Snuffling, the mother offers
a slim smile, turns away.
She slithers voyeuristically
through near slum streets,
and alleyways,
looking for drinking buddies
to share a hefty pint
of applejack wine.
-2007-
Charley Plays a Tune
(Version 2)
Crippled with arthritis
and Alzheimer’s,
in a dark rented room,
Charley plays
melancholic melodies
on a dust filled
harmonica he
found abandoned
on a playground of sand
years ago by a handful of children
playing on monkey bars.
He now goes to the bathroom on occasion,
relieving himself takes forever; he feeds the cat when
he doesn’t forget where the food is stashed at.
He hears bedlam when he buys fish at the local market
and the skeleton bones of the fish show through.
He lies on his back riddled with pain,
pine cones fill his pillows and mattress;
praying to Jesus and rubbing his rosary beads
Charley blows tunes out his
celestial instrument
notes float through the open window
touch the nose of summer clouds.
Charley overtakes himself with grief
and is ecstatically alone.
Charley plays a solo tune.
-2007
Rod Stroked Survival with a Deadly Hammer
Rebecca fantasized that life was a lottery ticket or a pull of a lever,
that one of the bunch in her pocket was a winner or the slots were a redeemer;
but life itself was not real that was strictly for the mentally insane at the Elgin
Mental Institution.
She gambled her savings away on a riverboat
stuck in mud on a riverbank, the Grand Victoria, in Elgin, Illinois.
Her bare feet were always propped up on wooden chair;
a cigarette dropped from her lips like morning fog.
She always dreamed of traveling, not nightmares.
But she couldn’t overcome, overcome,
the terrorist ordeal of the German siege of Leningrad.
She was a foreigner now; she is a foreigner for good.
Her first husband died after spending a lifetime in prison
with stinging nettles in his toes and feet; the second
husband died of hunger when there were no more rats
to feed on, after many fights in prison for the last remains.
What does a poet know of suffering?
Rebecca has rod stroked survival with a deadly mallet.
She gambles nickels, dimes, quarters, tokens tossed away,
living a penniless life for grandchildren who hardly know her name.
Rebecca fantasized that life was a lottery ticket or the pull of a lever.
-2007-
Mother, Edith, at 98
Edith, in this nursing home
blinded with macular degeneration,
I come to you with your blurry
eyes, crystal sharp mind,
your countenance of grace−
as yesterday’s winds
I have chosen to consume you
and take you away.
“Oh, where did Jesus disappear
to”, she murmured,
over and over again,
in a low voice
dripping words
like a leaking faucet:
“Oh, there He is my
Angel of the coming.”
I Am Old Frustrated Thought
I am old frustrated thought
I look into my once eagle eyes
and find them dim before my dead mother,
I see through clouded egg whites with days
passing by like fog feathers.
I trip over old experiences and expressions,
try hard to suppress them or revisit them;
I’m a fool in my damn recollections,
not knowing what to keep and what to toss out−
but the dreams flow like white flour and deceive
me till they capture the nightmare of the past images
in a black blanket wrapped up
and wake me before my psychiatrist.
I only see this nut once every three months.
It is at times like these I know not where I walk
or venture. I trip over my piety and spill my coffee cup.
I seek sanctuary in the common place of my nowhere life.
Solid footing is a struggle in the sock of depression
it is here the days pass and the years slip like ice cubes.
Rose Petals in a Dark Room
I walk in a mastery of the night and light
my money changers walk behind me
they are fools like clowns in a shadow of sin,
they’re busy as bees as drunken lovers,
Sodom and Gomorrah before the salt pillar falls.
In a shadow of red rose pedals
drunken lovers walk changing Greek and Roman
currency to Jewish or Tyrian money-
they are fools, all fools, at what they do.
Everyone’s life is a conflict.
They are my lovers and my sinners
I can’t sleep at night without them
by my bed or the sea of Galilee.
Fish in cloth nets are my friends and my converts.
I pray in my garden alone; while all the rest
who love beside me sleep behind their innocence.
The rose is a tender thorn compared to my arrest.
and soon crucifixion.
It is here the morning and the night come together,
where the sea and the land part;
where the building crumbles
and I trust not myself to them.
I am but a poet of the ministry,
rose petals in a dark room fall.
Everyone’s life is a conflict.
But mine is mastery of light and night
and I walk behind the footsteps of no one.
Michael Lee Johnson © 2010Dennis Joe
The Ballad Of The Poor White Boys
O Fellowship called to the great supper
[Canto XXIV Dante Translated by C. H. Sissons]
The Streets here hunger for pedestrian soul
like Christ hungered death, amidst physical
and spiritual pain, to be whole:
to be one with life so abapical;
yet existing as well as one could do.
To open ones’ eyes to an evenfall
and painfulness inflicted by the blue
scum, yearning for the burning of Toxteth,
they’ll settle for this bloody rendezvous.
For you have been sentenced to civil death,
poor white boy, by pious middle classes,
before they cleansed you, before you drew breath
before cheers, before they raised their glasses,
they condemned you and your kind, poor white boy,
to emptiness where nothing surpasses.
Careful of the metaphor they employ
when writing letters to The Guardian.
élite the elitism, an alloy
made of one-part antediluvian
and blended well with copper-bottomed fear,
dispensed with wisdom and grace and élan.
These feigning lovers will not shed a tear
(they deem you undeserving of their care)
and no dirge they chant when you are not here.
The hearse carries you to the house of prayer,
to atone for sins against their reason,
as the body counters make you aware:
your soul belongs to them for the season.
Like this song, you will return to the street
where you’ll haunt them with a lack of vision.
You will not chalk up another whipping
for you cannot be ground down where you are.
A world that hates its young can never sing
of a future, for it can’t see that far.