Tasos Leivaditis (1922-88)
Translated by N.N. Trakakis
If You Want To Be Called A Human Being
If you want to be called a human being
you will not cease, not even for a moment, to fight for peace and justice.
You will go out onto the streets, you will shout, your lips will bleed from shouting
your face will bleed from the bullets – but don’t take a single step back.
Each of your cries will be a stone thrown at the warmongers’ windows
each of your gestures will tear down injustice.
And beware: don’t lose track, not even for a moment.
If you start thinking back to your childhood years
you will let thousands of children be shattered into pieces as they play unsuspectingly in cities
if you look for a moment at the sunset
people tomorrow will be lost in the darkness of war
if you stop for a moment to dream
millions of people’s dreams will turn to ash beneath the bombshells.
You have no time
you have no time for yourself
if you want to be called a human being.
If you want to be called a human being
you might have to leave behind your mother, your beloved, your child.
You won’t hesitate.
You will give up your lamp and your bread
you will give up the relaxing evenings on the front porch
for the rough road that leads to tomorrow.
You won’t flinch from anything or be afraid.
I know, it’s nice to listen to a harmonica in the evening,
to gaze upon a star, to dream
it’s nice to lean over your beloved’s red lips
and hear her tell you her dreams for the future.
But you must take leave of all these things and set out
for you are responsible for all the harmonicas in the world,
for all the stars and all the dreams
if you want to be called a human being.
If you want to be called a human being
you might have to be locked up in jail for twenty years or more
but even in jail you’ll always remember spring, your mother, the world.
Even within the four walls of your cell
you will continue your journey upon the earth.
And when in the endless silence of the night
you knock on the wall of the cell with your finger
from the other side you’ll receive a reply from Spain.
Even though you see your days go by and your hair turn grey
you won’t grow old.
In jail you will begin each day younger and anew
as new battles keep arising in the world
if you want to be called a human being.
If you want to be called a human being
you must be ready to die any morning.
Overnight in isolation you will write a long and loving letter to your mother
you will write on the wall the date, your initials and one word: Peace
as though you were writing your entire life story.
Ready to die any morning
ready to stand before the six rifles
as though you were standing before the entire future.
Ready to hear, amidst the volley of shots killing you, the thousands of simple people singing while fighting for peace.
If you want to be called a human being.
Simple Words
I would like to speak
simply
the way you unbutton your shirt
and reveal an old scar
the way you feel cold at the elbow
and turn
to find holes in what you’re wearing
the way a comrade sits on a rock and mends his singlet.
To speak of whether I might return someday
carrying a filthy mess tin brimming with exile
carrying in my pockets two clenched fists
to speak
simply –
but for now let me lean my crutches somewhere.
We once dreamed of becoming great poets
we spoke of the sun.
Now our heart pierces us
like nails in our boots.
In the past we’d say: sky, now we say: courage.
We’re no longer poets
but only
comrades
with big wounds and ever bigger dreams.
The wind howls outside the tent
the barbedwire embedded in the belly of the night
the lamp broken
and leaking oil
Thomas’ face beneath the bandages
must be red and swollen from the rifle butt blows
the stench of smoke and feet
Elias says: the weather will change
Dimitris is silent
and Nicholas struggles to plug the holes in the tent
with a piece of boiled potato.
Someone coughs. We are cold.
The guards’ steps can be heard.
Tonight, mother, we’re thinking of writing to you
that we might hear the rain
walking along with your worn out clogs
that we might see your smile
hanging like a flask over our thirst.
They feed us rotten potatoes: don’t worry about us
they curse us and hit us: give us your love
maybe we won’t return – light the lamp, mother,
others will come.
Now you’d be gathering from the clothesline the white clothes of exile
you’d be sewing our socks with patches of your care
but the gloves you knitted for us, mother, we won’t wear them
we gave them to a comrade who was court-martialled
we also gave him some tinned food and a piece of our palm
he tied the top of the sack with a cord
tossed the sack over his shoulder
and we saw him going up
snipping with his scraggy legs
pieces of the facing sky.
Every morning they count us
every night we count the excess plates
there’s excess bitterness in our eyes
when the rain plays dice with the gendarmes
and night falls and the whistles growl.
Now we’re thinking of tucking our hands under our armpits
to see if there are any stars in the sky
to remember that face
leaning in the doorway
but we can’t remember
we have no time to remember
we have no time but to stand upright
and die.
Beloved
even if I feel cold when it rains
even if I fondle the crumbs of memory in my pockets
and my palms are still on fire from the time I held you
I can’t come back.
How can I deny the crust of bread that twenty of us shared
how can I deny my mother who waits for a cup of sage tea
how can I deny our child whom we promised a cornet of sky
how can I deny Nicholas –
we found out he was singing as the firing squad took aim.
If I were to come back
we wouldn’t have a lamp, we wouldn’t have
anywhere to lay our dream.
We would sit in silence.
And when I’d want to look at you
the tattered boots of the comrade I denied
would cover my eyes like a cloud.
Give me your love.
And when I return someday
carrying my heart like a large parcel
we’ll sit on the rundown steps.
I’ll say: You no longer like my calloused hands.
You’ll smile and clasp my hands.
A star will tinkle in the soaked sky.
I might even
cry.
Today we opened our day
like a sack forgotten over the years.
We searched for the socks you used to wear, comrade
your hands
your life that came to a stop.
Bitterness threw into our eyes
a handful of nails.
We then cleaned the cookhouse
lit a fire
and shared a smoke between us
beneath the ragged clouds.
Here where our lives are eggshells under their feet
with death closer still
and an elbow patch on your torn jacket
where the name of a dead comrade
is like a fork fixed to your tongue:
how can you sing?
It is enough for us to speak
simply
the way one hungers simply
the way one loves
the way we die
simply.
Tanner
when –
it gets to you,
when your job leaves you
exhausted, degraded and broke,
just remember what it was like
when you were looking for work,
remember how
exhausted, degraded and …
ok, so basically
it was the same, yeah
but hey – at least you pay taxes now!
at least you have the right to complain now!
unless you work in a shop of course
in which case, sorry, but fuck you:
so say
the slave driver workshy companies
and the slave driver workshy public
that exhaust and degrade you
for the privilege
of paying their taxes for them,
even when you’re broke.
damn. really? that’s REALLY the social set-up you have? damn.
I wouldn’t blame you
for chucking the Molotov
at something,
at anything or anyone
when it gets to you,
even if it gets to you
all the time
because it is
ALL THE TIME
so here,
drink this bottle of vodka while I look for my matches.
we’re hiring!
she hands me her C.V.
and there’s nothing on it:
it says she was born
that she likes computer games, and
that’s about it.
I know she won’t get the job,
poor thing
fresh out of school
but instantly stale
with a lack of experience
my own C.V. is too big,
pages and pages of temp jobs
in all sorts of places
up and down the country:
no one trusts me anymore
employers don’t account
for people moving around
to avoid people
people like them
who judge us
for having too
little
or too
much
experience
with equal prejudice,
you know?
Barry Tebb
Years
There is no way to bridge the chasm
Between the living and the dead.
Two years on you came in a dream,
Mute, expressionless, dressed in blue
Just as you were when I first met you.
Desperately we tried to speak
But our lips refused to move
As your image faded.
I Was Heathcliff bereft
Crying into the wind.
The Divine Pity
In memory of Brenda Williams (1948-2015)
For Alan Morrison without whose encouragement nothing would have moved and
for Daisy Abey without whose support nothing would have begun
The grief from your death is beyond measure
My closest friend for fifty years.
Remembering the rivers of hours
That passed between us, your early years
A harvest of sadness, only at the end
Had we worked through the nights you spent
At your mother’s side, walking the winter nights
To avoid your father’s rage.
We took those years apart
Nightmare by nightmare
Fear by fear, his steps towards the door
His threats, his flailing,
The hands of the clock
As the time drew near.
Your sister and brothers in bed
As eldest you must bear
Your mother’s fear
And be a shield
And still a child endure.
No longer here
You can mentor me
No more or catch
A doubtful metaphor
Or make coffee
While I explore
Your shelves to find
Delmore and his despair.
I have none of your cats
To caress and share
Piggy especially
Who would sit by your side
And adore.
I had a phone for you alone
And a second elsewhere
Our conversations metered
By the hour and every year
There would be more
I never thought to keep the score.
Joining the shards,piercing the shades
Through the lens of fear
Making clear the memories
Far and near.
Barry Tebb © 2017Micheal Tinarwo
1. A Ruthless Man
Love is not present in his heart, only anger and disaster resides in his path
He feels no care or compassion for his people, rather he is merciless and deceitful
Greed stays in his heart, and he is bemused at his own kingdom falling apart
How can a man be so cruel and unjust?
The cry and anguish of his people does not weaken his heart
For decades his people have been pleading for his mercy
For decades his greed has left his people’s pockets and stomachs empty
Who can stop such a Ruthless man?
Who can intervene and save millions of innocent human beings?
Who can denounce this ruthless man of his thrown?
Like a roaring lion he inflicts fear in the hearts of his people, and takes their belongings for his own.
Fairness does not exist in his kingdom,
Millions have been slaughtered by him and his army for exercising their freedom.
We should unite and do what we can,
To stop this disaster caused by a ruthless Mugabe
2. Running from homelands
I am like a bush rabbit that has missed the snares of cruel hunters
My heart is no longer tied to my habitual territory because of fear
Anxiety has dug deep in my arteries and terror is tearing me apart
I am choice-less and now exploring the possibility of dyeing in foreign land
My current jurisdiction is only a ground contaminated with strings of threats
From prohibited freedom of speech to the promiscuity of election swindles
I am a Zimbabwean unwilling to be brainwashed by unwanted old man
I have tasted plenty famines that left my plate of health in deficiency
I watched rich farms disappearing like dew in the morning
As the lazy new land owners behaved like lizards basking in sun
Fertile lands were twisted into a wilderness of void landscapes
Escaping Mugabe’s skeleton needles will turn me into a migrant
Micheal Tinarwo © 2016
Barry Tebb
Reflections on Local Election Day 2014
Mondeo Man’s become a Kipper
Essex Man, his brother, has too.
Farage’s mouth opens wide enough
To swallow a London bus, he’d like to
You know it, his scary Goebbels said
We Londoners are too well-educated
And cultured to vote for them
I only hope so.
From Bangladesh to Brick Lane
From the Ganges to Tooting Beck
From Nairobi to East Cheam
Hands are joined.
Kaiser Cameron has a hunted look
And orders a doubling of border patrols.
IDS slavers, a Heydrich-in-the-making,
Clegg plans five more years as deputy Fuhrer
Practising Sieg Heil in his bedroom,
The least Farage would expect.
North against South but with
London holding out. A chill runs
Through Eastern Europe, the Slavs
Remember the Camps, the Poles the Ghetto.
Ed’s brow is furrowed, the Fabians suggest
A sharp left turn, Blairites a righter.
The editors of The Mail and The Express
Order the files of Der Sturmer translated,
Making ‘Jew’ into ‘scrounger’.
Sanctions on the disabled who cannot
Goose-step fast enough are planned.
Farage fears a failed bier-kellar putsch
And phones Le Pen for advice. Germ Warfare
Against the unemployed merits a glance.
Farage arranges a secret meeting with
Greece’s Battalion of the Golden Dawn,
Dreaming a second Kristallnicht.
Auden’s ghost follows Hamlet’s father
Across the ramparts but who is Hamlet
And who can divide the sea?
Barry Tebb © 2014
Measures of Science
for Debjani Chatterjee
For two hours in a dream you struggled to make me write
Forced me, made me ignore the banquet of feasting poets
Like an amah with a steel spoon you fed me the words
And so against the urge to sleep forced pen not pain to rule.
You refused to let me off fatigues “You must write, like it or not.”
The years you pushed back cancer with death the inevitable master,
You would not let me give up, “Scribble on the back of a paper plate”,
You urged, forbidding them to clear the table while I wrote against the grain
Against my own pain.
You charmed me with the story of your visit to the palace awash with poets,
Listening to your friend, Basir Sultan Kasmir going on and on to HM about waving
To her in Lahore fifty years before at the last royal visit, hardly a Durbar, just an open
Rolls raising dust, the children waving flags, shouting for baksheesh
HM must have had lessons in holding a smile, her beam continuous as
Carcanet and Bloodaxe presented, Duhig, McMillan and the sainted Carol Ann
Whom an hour before I struggled on the attic floor to read, gritting my teeth
At her mannish metaphor, bragging about beating boys at ball games and showering
Afterwards alone, the water pink with menstrual blood.
You had a single glass of bubbly with chips to nibble in Charing Cross Station,
Already preparing in your serene Brahmin way for a meditation retreat
Aimed at cancer sufferers and their carers so you so little me, preparing
Your power point presentation about Ramilla and Jerusalem the Golden.
You seemed stronger than me, was it the online course in CBT in preparation
For your MA in Art Psychotherapy? All you missed due to your travels was yoga
And boxercise. I was never one for crowds, classes or courses, more for controversy,
Protest and satire. The muse poet breaks through night sweats and sleeping pills painted,
Wilde adored and Yeats died for but managed to kiss and caress in a poem
‘To His Last Mistress’
My creativity was never so bad until the light bulb behind me exploded suddenly
Like a starting gun while I was struggling to comprehend the crucial emphasis of
Relational psychoanalysis, social theory, trauma studies, non-linear dynamic systems
Theories and the irrationalist psychoanalytic orientations, all anchored in contemporary
Dialectical constructive hermeneutic epistemologies.
Is it too late now? Heaney in heaven with Jimmy Simmons, equals at last.
All poets the same, sisters under the skin, scribbling, competing, backbiting
And you Debjani recounting the rage of Joe Winter, the chance meeting on a verandah
Of a guesthouse in Bengal, Winter at full throttle, demanding why the translation grant
For Tagore’s ‘Gitanjali’ going to Radice via the Arts Council Committee you chaired.
At the year’s turning I’m back in training, ready to compete with McDiarmid’s ghost
On the art of the long poem, with Mallarme on obscurity and Valery on the sublime.
Barry Tebb © 2014
Laura Taylor
Right Hand/Wrong Ink
A ragged-arsed philanthropy
fuelled by knowledge based on faith;
a myth-making ‘reality’ echoes in your throat.
The Money Trick you swallowed
works your tongue and teeth and lips,
and you claim a status eagerly,
handed down by men insane
with greed and acquisition:
“This is how it’s Always Been”
Red right hand writes black is white
in black and white;
war is peace; dots your eyes;
scribes within the margins in wrong ink.
Your pen emits a unity,
a summary of harmony
not found inside the whole;
of a union invisible to Jack.
Laura Taylor © 2014
Angela Topping
First Married Christmas 1933
The narrow house was world enough
for four of them, the old couple and the young.
Mary and Peter, newly-wed, living with her parents
in the only home she’d ever known.
Adeste Fideles and midnight mass, long walk
from St Marie’s to Moss Bank. Next morning,
wake to a Christmas full of family closeness,
pudding with silver sixpences, blackberry wine.
Mary felt the first flickers of new life –
my older brother making himself known,
a struck match in the darkness of my father,
still mourning his mother, his back-turned family.
Angela Topping © 2013
Barry Tebb
My First Poem in Three Years
for Alan Morrison, whose ‘Emergency Verse’ inspired it
Mother in the mirror of another I saw you,
Bespactacled, bent, burrowing into a book
Like a mole snouting grubs in the churned marl
Your stick by your side, the twinkling in your eye
Always ready with a sly fiver to slip in my palm
And your dogged pride, a Durham miner’s daughter
Bequeathing to me the ghosted template
Of Methodist Sundays, Hunwick the hamlet
You grew up in, seven siblings to share, speaking
A tongue I could never master except “Haway, man”
Your teetotal Bible-punching father, turned Quaker
In old age, taking me for walks down hidden tracks
To lost villages where the stones spoke syllables
To the doomed skies and museless I cried
With the wheeling rooks in their spring tide.
I learned your canny ways years after you died,
Lonely in London and exiled, when I saw your face
In the mirror of another I cried and cried
And would not be denied.
THE VANDAL
Someone has been tearing up the autumn,
Its ripped leaves ripple across the road
Flip like hinged cards in the moist grass.
The rain-varnished houses vanish in smoke.
Drift on the air like blown-out breath in gusts:
So we forget frog-ponds and nut-gatherers,
Remember instead that weather’s for us
Who know well its intentions, wind-keen
Intense as the first frost hardening
Stubble grass to a tacky ice-blanket.
Listen! In bed we hear the swollen trees totter,
Dropsical-limbed, murmuring outside the window
Like Catherine’s insistent ghost voice
“Let me in, Let me in!”
Barry Tebb © 2011Angela Topping
Trapped
For John Lennon
Trapped, not in back entries behind terraces
but in posh Mendips with eyefuls of stained glass,
respectability in every spike of creamy porridge pebble-dash.
Everything neat and scrubbed, dishcloth draped over taps.
Trapped, by an upright aunt, whose expectations
weighed heavy as iron slabs of kitchen scales.
High grades for the bright boy, good job with pension,
work hard now for success later on. Homework to be done.
Trapped by fans, wa wa wa and love me do. Where were
the good years, writing songs with Paul? The years fooling
at school, flunking O levels on purpose, trying Mimi’s temper?
Fighting for the right to grow up, wear white suits, love Yoko.
Trapped in the end by a fan’s insanity, proffering an exit
marked by a gun, red blooms on a white life, imagine.
How far he was from home, lost Liverpool boy!
Trapped by our love, locked in legend, sealed on discs.
In His Eyes
He married a young girl, lissom and lovely,
her eyes were lapis lazuli, with hair of ebony.
She was cotton and lace, wholesome as honey,
his hands spanned her waist, she was dainty.
She was coral and amber, she was silver chains.
She crackled with wit like a greenwood fire.
She was crisp and fresh like an ironed shirt, slim
as a willow; full of life as a dancing flame.
*
He married a matron, comfortable and round,
her breasts expansive, her belly a mound.
She was silk and wool, warming as curry;
She was soft as cushions, cosy and snug.
She was TV by the fireside, a bottle of wine,
she was routine and clockwork, the daily grind.
She was weekends and laughter; she was warmth,
she was light, his young girl still in the peace of the night.
Atlantic Whale Fishing
Below, at night, I hear the salt airs of the sea,
a poignant mermaids’ tune we sailors fear,
the keening of the pitching ship, as, at the prow
our Jenny breasts the waves, the only girl aboard.
Timbers sigh as we sail farther from our home.
‘To wives and sweethearts – may they never meet’,
the awful joke accompanies our daily rum,
hides our longing like sailcloth covers the sky.
Stars grow unfamiliar as we sail beyond our scope.
I think of my Nancy, at home with our little ones,
waiting for money and these scrimshaw toys I carve.
The sea has made men of us all, and yet
it’s land we long for, till we grow homesick
for black and ice-berged sea, its infinite deeps.
Angela Topping © 2010
David Trippas
It’s days like these, you sign on all year for.
Those few days each year, when it’s t shirt weather,
and for once the cannabliss plants look satisfied,
pink milky babies bottles of cider,
fuking fluoride for this rotting tooth of a nuclear nation,
it will take more than the flashlight of authority,
to turn of the light in a chillum of this starlit warm night,
those who say the solstice moon does not affect us,
should hear the chemical chains rattle on the asylum on the hill.
It’s oak wood elm of a sunny lake herb garden
and it’s dancing hot days like these, you sign on all year for.
fin
A country pub back garden.
The air conditioning roars,
like they’re testing a jet engine,
cigarette butts litter the parched ground.
Little dots of bright colour,
from the retirement garden centre,
sets of the indifferent bushes,
the wild sycamore triumphs as usual.
A swing for bored kids,
munching on a packet of salty crisps,
creaks in the dull day.
A local comes out to smoke a fag,
glares at us as if he’s,
wanted by the police,
but just can’t face going home.
The car park takes up half the pub ground,
the fizzy real ale is just about drinkable,
it last saw a wooden cask in 1934.
Chubby builders arrive,
looking at their tri-quarter,
dream of a chocolate éclair,
made by a girl in a huge shed in Kettering,
she dreams of love,
on a beach in Rhyl.
The traffic roars bye
and the Mrs. takes a smiling pride,
as she says the food is of,
a lone blackbird,
has given up listening for the sound of worms,
in the rock hard ground,
a women has been sentenced to be stoned to death in Iran.
David Trippas © 2010Barry Tebb
Asylum Seekers
When Blunkett starts to talk like Enoch Powell
I think of Harold Wilson’s statue in Huddersfield Station
Caught striding forward, gripping his pipe in his pocket,
Hair blowing in the wind.
Could we but turn that bronze
To flesh I would have asked him to meet the two
Asylum-seekers I met in Huddersfield’s main street
And asked directions from. “We are Iranian refugees”,
They stammered apologetically. “Then welcome to this country,”
I said as we shook hands, their smiles like the sun.
Barry Tebb © 2007
Michael Thorne
An Evening on the Roof in Fez
What of the two ladies
Who look down upon me?
One has no teeth,
The other no smile
But still mirth and joy
As they watch me, the juvenile.
‘Why have you got no wife?
You wash in the evening
But the sun is gone,
How will you dry your clothes?’
Silence, no further thoughts
Other than my apparent lack of practicality.
Greet him, ‘Peace!’
No further conversation,
Still they stand in observation;
‘Why does he wash in the evening?
Doesn’t he know the sun is weak?
Allah! His clothes are not even clean!’
And Suddenly Alone
Holding onto symmetry I step out the door
But she is silent and unconcerned
So soon I am alone again.
I had her between my fingers and palm
But in the cool air of this evening
She has slipped away.
A shame that it’s so, when it felt right
I knew who the poets were
And I knew who had reason.
I knew it in the moments before
I had thought to dare
To open the street.
Now consumed I embark
Through the towers of faces,
Across the bridges and stations,
Between the eves of the circus
And in the fluttered dreams of the city,
I walk without purpose, but looking.
Symmetry had shown me a map
But my memory has deserted
As though unconcerned for my safety.
Hapless images flop through my brain,
In time I forget the design I sought
And rupture among them.
Now I consume and embark
Through the towers of faces,
Across the bridges and stations,
Between the eves of the circus
And in the fluttered dreams of the city,
I walk with purpose, but not looking.
Michael Thorne © 2008
The Suspect
None knew the suspect’s name,
Who lay in a state of disquiet,
Opening his arms to the world.
His wrapped smile
Faded his face into oblivion
From where he longed to return,
The shudder at his edges
Forced from his eyes a tear
Attempted hid, failed.
Beside his foot a cat skulked,
Keen in the warm morning light
That flooded its small halo.
The suspect had no words
To emancipate his feelings,
Except awkward stuttered gestures,
Misinformation he had no means to withhold,
Firing nuances into the world
That others failed to understand.
At a time when people seemed
Increasingly unconscious,
He remained starkly aware.
A pale imprint of Lucifer
Smiled from his skin,
To provoke but not estrange
And his jacket was a bulky hunk
Of schoolyard trauma.
His knuckles were white, his face
Crimson cold.
At a time when people
Did not care to wander,
He felt eternally alone.
Michael Thorne © 2008
Michael Thorne
The deepest void
How the breath pours out of the woman,
Dropping and grazing each cheek and
Sucking every kiss with her ebony charm.
There is a fulcrum rocking in the chest,
A groaning pelvis.
They pulse through the throbbing arteries of love,
Lifting up skirts over shaking thighs
And picking kisses across wet skin, steadied
Pounding
Free.
How the sweat pours out over the man,
Twisting, scorching in her wanton hum and
Building shuddering quakes in the early morning.
Theirs is an intimate translation,
Sucked out of the deepest void of the living world.
A neighing, beating, drowning ecstasy
That comes shuddering into existence,
Time and again,
Leaving behind no memories,
But the haunting loss of a haunting need.
The end of necessity
As if turning a moment in time could
make any difference!
Scorn falling on the head of each new idea
like a jealous father.
Has the era of isolation run its course?
Has the era of community and tribe played its cards
to be superseded by the emptiness of endless possibilities;
the boundless reaches of the modern dream?
The edge of the old ways;
Wilfred Thesiger’s time with the Bedu;
A groaning jolt of the train lurching forward and
Carrying me mechanically into the world
Of some other stranger.
These unfamiliar faces belie the similarity wrought
By hunger for a destination;
By longing for a tomorrow
That is distant and abstract and raw.
Harboured in the cola that I drank,
In the TV that flashed above my head,
In the car that I rode later that day,
In the tagine that I ate after sunset;
Diluted, muddled and unnecessary.
Michael Thorne © 2009
Innocence
I read an image of design,
Some remnant of civilisation:
Get lost! It shouted
And I got lost.
Get stoned! It smiled
And I did the same.
Get ready! It beckoned
And I lost my feeling.
Get out, it mumbled
And I left its side.
On seeing the unedited footage of war
Crowd fisted like screaming fools,
A wailing head in a mother’s breast
And all about falling, falling
Down into some terrible consequence.
The future,
Crying out with wild eyes
In unison, then in tandem, then disharmony.
Broken, shattered limbs and the boy,
The boy with the face half gone,
Still standing, numbly, swaying
In a hot desert wind that punctures his skull.
The crowd, throbbing and unwieldy,
Running like some maddened river
Through the obvious course,
Suddenly darts to stagger
Upon a fleeing stranger caught out of place,
Beaten to a pulp and raised above heads,
Body lifeless and no longer breathing,
Head flapping against the empty sky.
The crowd, maddened and quaking,
Shocking the walls of the houses around,
Hammering the shuttered shops.
Bathed crimson-red, white and brown,
Heavy in the scent of sweat and blood
That runs in the faces and in the gutters,
That rises to a crescendo
Endless, pulsing, unattainable.
The crowd, twisting and tumbling,
Uncertain of how to express
The multitude of fear, hate and despair,
Overflows,
Spills out into torrents, slows
To a trickle of heavy limbs, eyes, souls.
Grief in the consequence, grief in the means,
The ends and the beginning of it all.
Still shouting at forces they cannot stop
They are wild and desperation
Leads to belief in their own power,
The force of God, however misguided.
Michael Thorne © 2009
David Trame
Heaven
Where walls and stones assist you
envelop the rustling of your voice,
take the wood-panelled fortress
of the reading room, walls that cradle
the joy of unending gossiping,
a still point flowing in time;
the row of slate houses outside,
the streets where cars, bikes, all gears imaginable
can get disassembled or crashed
as in a child’s play on a merging horizon;
where you don’t feel guilty in being idle,
like a drowsy emperor at dinner
lying in his gold, leaning on one elbow,
marbled-in, pregnant with
a bee-hive of laughs and cries,
merged in the sea-roar, crossed further on
by shivers of light, currents like
those rippling on your dog’s fur
caught in his dream-tides.
David Trame © 2007
Michael Thorne
A Long Journey
Two little ladies with their mother’s pashminas wrapped around their bodies,
radiant orange and striking purple,
skip around the passengers awaiting the time of boarding
in a dull grey bus station.
Their carefree games cause mother and grandmother to fret,
afraid that the grumpy crowd will not appreciate
this explosion of colour and song.
‘Sit down grandma!’ the younger girl demands.
‘They’ve got special chairs for old people like you.’
Grandmother, humble, smiles and takes her place,
rolling eyeballs and proclaiming to mother
‘How will we survive the journey?’
The skipping continues,
young smiles move in time with each other
through a forest of static faces.
I cannot resist sticking out my tongue
at the quizzing eyes that pop up in front of me
to conduct their brief survey in search of further entertainment.
It is a battle I know I cannot win.
Mother knows it.
And grandmother.
I say that noisy young girls travel in the cavernous underbelly of the bus,
just then emerging at the driver’s command
and triggering a flurry of activity from passengers keen to get the best seats.
‘No they don’t!’ the girls cry in unison.
‘You’re silly!’ the older girl shouts,
while her sister twitches and moves closer to mother, less sure.
“Don’t get them started,” mother smiles in disdain.
“You’ll regret it,” grandmother laughs. “It’s a long journey.”
Michael Thorne © 2009
Michael Thorne
Cartuja
I watch the fat man with the giant camera
Protruding from his chest like a wishful erection.
His wife and son trail behind,
The former apparently soaking in some essence
Of the spirit of this place;
The latter blankly following, an oblique fuzz
Emanating from the puberty of his top lip.
Will he ever look at these photos again,
really look?
Does he sense a shame
In the thick ornamentations made of Indian gold?
A sense of God in the marble floors?
The oneness of perspective among the orange trees in the courtyard?
Or is he just passing through, hovering
Not really here to assimilate
Just to look, snap and work up an appetite
Before moaning about the heat as he sits down to lunch.
Michael Thorne © 2009
The July sun
Peace comes when the July sun is at its sharpest
drumming hard to dry the morning’s dew.
Cut grass and hedgerows load with scent,
the whisper of the horizon holds out
not too far, not too close.
Other times seem like this, but are not.
The trained focus of the easy mind,
a longer time of warm languid stupor
Herefordshire (or thereabouts).
The eternal acreage of childhood dreams, reminders
that little moments remain longstanding
in periods of ethereal endearment,
both to childhood
and now to you.
My other eye
Your coca cola glass is filled with water
from a reservoir somewhere,
your pot of marmite
since breakfast.
Your Christmas cards
wait to be sent
received
sent again next year.
I cut a glass eye, slip it in
but I can still see.
Lovers’ Corniche (Cairo)
The lovers huddle in corners,
faces exposed to the Nile,
backs to the smoggy onslaught.
Close pairs in every nook,
the women coloured tapestries
culminating in the hijab.
Occasional giggles
give gestures of stolen time,
stillness, while all about rushes
universal.
Two lovers lean in close.
They almost kiss,
but continue to talk,
with slowing words
passing only as each tries
to hold onto themselves
without falling in to the other.
They hang, mouths
breathing lung to lung
words their lips
would replace with kisses.
Passion,
free from inhibition
and fettered by it.
The museum of antiquities
It takes me a minute
to convince myself I’m not
in a shopping mall in Dubai.
These are the real thing,
the ancient stone of Egypt.
The mark of the human mind
draws me to them like I am drawn
to a hill to mark nature’s mind
but the worship here is different
for I may pass judgement.
I reserve it. Who am I to know
that stone carved thus
is anything but the beginning of time,
the glowing worship of human form
set in a membrane of decay
Amun and Mut shatter in front of me
cursing their own unity.
Restored they sit defaced,
aged and ashamed,
though we still gather to worship.
Xelís de Toro
The Fishfinder
A fishing community tries to come to terms with the fact that the fish have gone from the sea. One day, a child appears on the shore floating in a little basket. The village folk believe that when he grows up he will have special powers which would allow him to find fish.
They bring him up to be the fishfinder. He grows up learning to point out hoping that one day he will be able to point out where the fish are. But when his time comes he realises he can’t find the fish. Rather than disappointing his people, in the dead of the night he steals the glints from everybody’s eyes and with them he constructs a giant fish, each twinkle forming and scale. The following day when the people get up they see everything blurred. The sharpness of their vision has gone with the stolen glints but they soon feel happy as they see the fishfinder pointing out an enormous fish on the horizon.
Xelís de Toro © 2008