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


  • FEBRUARY BURNING

    One Saturday in February we drove

    from Rome’s Leonardo Da Vinci airport

    north up the valley of the Tiber

    to Umbertide in Umbria,

    a town bridging the river’s upper reaches,

    and that had guarded the northern Marches

    during the bloody and iconoclastic

    turbulence of the Renaissance.

    We passed Orvieto and Perugia.

    The sun shone unseasonably unfettered,

    emollient as a British day in late June.

    Folk were sunbathing on the grassy banks

    of the motorway service stations.

    When we reached our hotel on the town’s outskirts

    the air was soft as on a summer’s evening.

    Next day, St Valentine’s, the cathedral’s bell

    ringing for mattutino, the flat fields

    of vines, where lovers and iconoclasts

    might lie – between the curving river

    and the long road south – were drowned in mists.

     

    This month, that here always used to be bleak

    and wet, has become a changeling. Years

    after Umbertide, on another

    Valentine’s, we sat on a council bench

    beside the corniche in the lee of the Orme,

    sunning ourselves like superannuated

    terrapins. The uninhibited sun

    burned through a haze of blushing coral

    above Penmaenmawr over the bay.

    Februarius from februum,

    ‘purification’ – perhaps like the heat

    and the calm of love’s absolution.

     

     

     

     



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