Monthly Archives

July 2025

ON THE BEACH

David Selzer By David Selzer3 Comments1 min read6.3K views

The top of the hour, and the front-page next day

of the regional news, featured the traffic

jammed from the car park near the beach, along

the forest road, past the site of the royal court

exiled by the English invaders,

past the public toilets, then into

the village of Newborough itself

(named and founded by the invaders);

and many miles either side of the village

on the only main road in that part

of the island of Ynys Môn (‘Anglesey’

in the language of the occupiers).

 

Influencers on TikTok and Instagram

had videoed themselves extolling

the solitary beauty of Traeth Llandwyn

(Newborough Beach), and so, that August day,

legions had come seeking something special – but saw

only somebody else’s exhaust fumes.

I felt a brief spasm of schadenfreude

remembering another August day.

 

Then there was no sign on the main road

or in Newborough village for the beach,

and the road through the forest was a track

among sand hills planted with pine saplings.

Except for us the beach was deserted,

a secret only lovers had discovered.

Its sands – edged landward by high dunes sprouting

marram grass – extended for miles, were littered

with sea wrack and oyster shells, with razor clams

and bleached driftwood. Seaward a flock of gulls

was slowly, silently crossing the still bay.

On the distant shore a range of mountains

stretched to the horizon.

 

 

 

 

FLYPAST

David Selzer By David Selzer1 Comment1 min read4.2K views

Though mostly obscured by the rocky headland

at the mouth of the inlet, the piping

whistles of a small flock of oyster catchers

could be heard throughout the day, and most

of each evening too. One late afternoon

a trio of these stocky birds with their

slightly fussy call flew in formation past

our balcony piping away – on show

red beaks, pink feet, white rumps. And I thought

how seldom things rhyme in our dissonant

world, and that – to roughly paraphrase

Aristotle – coincidences merely

are accidents that rhyme.

 

 

 

 

AURORA BOREALIS: METAPHOR AND ORDER

In the night sky, beyond the promontory

to the north, there is a faint glow that is not

moonlight, and is rare at this latitude.

The iPhone shows the shifting colours the eye

cannot see tonight – red, green, violet;

bits of the sun borne on the solar wind,

caught in the earth’s electro-magnetic

net, that keeps us, chance inhabitants

of a chance planet, safe from the hot hale.

Long, long before the rules of chemistry

and physics, there was order through metaphor:

the Goddess of the Dawn and the God

of the North cavorting…

 

 

 

 

WEATHERS

A south westerly is blowing loose curtains

of rain across the bay like drifts of mist.

The horizon has been long gone, and with it

the silhouettes of fossil fuel platforms

in the Irish Sea off the North Wales coast.

 

By late afternoon the weather has changed

with the tides. Sun lights the disused works

on the far headland, and the vicissitudes

of Amlwch’s fortunes – copper mines then shipyards.

 

Large, low clouds pass slowly, elegantly –

like fluffy, misshapen dirigibles.

At dusk, on the easterly horizon,

the platforms’ orange lights gleam. As night falls

the sky clears of cloud, and there is only

blackness, and the untold stars in their pristine,

unlettered disarray.

 

 

 

 

THE ISLAND OF ATLAS

David Selzer By David Selzer1 Comment1 min read4.6K views

Given that Plato was keen to imprison

poets of whatever stripe because of their

disinclination to tell the truth,

how chuzpah of him to write in detail

about The Island of Atlas aka

Atlantis – its topography, its people,

its constitution, its politics, all

compared unfavourably with Athens,

of course – as if he had evidence

that the island, inundated, he claimed,

as a result of human frailty, had

actually existed in that ocean

that bears the name of his invention,

west of the Pillars of Heracles.

 

Perhaps he was thinking of other places

whose alleged dystopia was punished

by flooding – though north not west of the Straits

of Gibraltar: like Kêr-Is off the coast

of Brittany, lost by a wayward king

or his wayward daughter – or Cantref Gwaelod

drowned under the waters of Cardigan Bay

by a carousing, drunken prince forgetting

to keep the island’s flood gates shut fast.

Or maybe they were tales told by poets

keen to tell the truth about power.

 

 

 

SATANS

Is there some primate imperative, some

genetic human want, need, reverence for

so-called strong leaders, those masters of

othering, destroyers of order,

adepts in venality and stupidity,

casual slaughterers of innocence?

 

Israel attacks Iran on a pretext from the

loan library of Pretexts – more or less

the same pretext Alexander the Great

borrowed when he burned Persepolis,

(city of the Persians). Iran borrows

from the library of Virility

and attacks Israel – the same library the Crusaders used

when they captured Jerusalem and slaughtered

Jews and Muslims, men, women, and children.

 

And the world’s self-appointed Policeman –

in hock to Christian Evangelists

and Fossil Fuel Companies and the concept

of Full Spectrum Dominance – plays his trump card,

a TV series entitled THE END

OF DAYS, with seven full length episodes:

‘Iraq’, ‘Libya’, ‘Somalia’, ‘Sudan’,

‘Lebanon’, ‘Syria’, ‘Iran’; the seven

countries of the apocalypse; repeat.

 

Opportunists and fanatics, rich boys

and malignant narcissists, greedy shits

and unhinged rhetoricians, sadists

and chaps with things to prove are, it seems,

like the poor, always to be with us

to the very end of history.