David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • THEMES: THE RIVER DEE, CHESTER

    This is the second post in this category, one which brings together poems with a connecting theme.

    The Dee, which rises in North Wales and enters Liverpool Bay and the Irish Sea through the vast Dee Estuary, flows through the city of Chester in North West England. There is a  stretch of the river – no longer perhaps than a third of a mile – that flows past a tree-lined embankment called The Groves. The titles and opening lines of all of the poems inspired by that stretch are listed in alphabetical order. Please click on the title to read the whole poem.

     

    CORMORANTS

    In the driest months when the tidal river

    is low and the current almost lethargic,

    when the waters flow gently over the weir

    the Normans built to create a fish pool…

     

    COURAGE

    In the stretch from here to where the river bends

    around the meadows, there have been drownings –

    …A children’s cancer charity has fastened

    awareness-raising memento mori

    to the railings of a suspension footbridge…

     

    SALMON LEAP

    An aged busker in a Stetson sets up

    on the river embankment near the café.

    He talks at length about his life, then sings

    Carole King’s ‘And it’s too late, baby now’…

     

    THE BANDSTAND

    Beside the city’s  river is a bandstand –

    Victorian, octagonal in shape,

    with eight delicate wrought iron columns –

    redolent of summer Sunday afternoons,

    and the poignant breathiness of brass bands…

     

    THE CYBER DEAD

    ‘Knock-knock-knockin’ on Heaven’s door,’ a busker

    began to sing near to the ice cream kiosk,

    just after I had left the public toilet,

    its adamantine urinals made

    in Burnley…

     

    THE EMBRACE OF NOTHING

    Rome’s legionnaires quarried its sandstone cliffs

    and Ptolemy put the Dee on the map.

    William the Conqueror, in winter,

    force-marched his army over the Pennines

    to reach the river and waste the town…

     

    THE GROVES

    We are sitting on a bench in a peaceful

    place popular even on a winter’s day

    now lockdown has been eased. This tree-lined

    terraced embankment beside the river…

     

    THE RIVER

    This river, deeper than most in metaphor,

    abundantly fluent in simile,

    is in spate…

     

     

     

     

     



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