Welcome to David Selzer
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
Latest Post / Update
-
THE POKER
in Cambridge, England, 1943.
Outside, a rainy night, the Kardomah closed,
long queues at the Alhambra
for Max Miller, the Cheeky Chappie.
Inside, a roaring fire and a pride of philosophers.
Wittgenstein: The world is everything.
Russell: Man is not a solitary animal.
Popper: History has no meaning.
Zeleznik: The world is a fiction of memories.
Did Wittgenstein pick up the poker
to emphasise a point?
Or silence Popper?
Did Popper mention the poker
to point a moral paradox?
Or mock Wittgenstein?
Did Russell call one an ‘upstart’,
the other ‘erudite’?
Or admonish them both?
Did Zeleznik arrive with Wittgenstein,
agree with Popper,
and leave with Russell?
Or was he at The Alhambra?
Next morning, the skivvy, who had
certainly been at the music hall, removed
the ashes and re-set the fire. The poker
she moved from wherever it was to
wherever she judged it should be –
and chuckled.
Woman: Is this Cockfosters?
Max: No, madam, Miller’s the name!
Search by Tag
9/11 A.E. Housman America Anglesey anti-semitism Aristotle Atlantic Atlantic Slave Trade Auschwitz Beaumaris British Cape Town cathedral Celts charity Cheshire Chester childhood Churchill Civil War comrades cormorant death Dee dee estuary Dublin England English Europe Ezra Pound Fossils fox French Gaza gazebo German gibbet God Great War gulls heart Hegel Hitler Iraq Ireland Irish sea irony. Israel Jerusalem Jews landscape Liverpool Liverpool Bay Llandudno London love Manhattan May Menai Straits Mersey miracle Missouri Moscow Napoleon North Wales Ovid paradise Paris Plato pre-pubescent Putin racist river river Dee robin roma Romans Rome Russia skull South Africa Soweto Stalin swifts Syria T.S. Eliot teacher Telford USA Venice Victorian Vienna W.B. Yeats Wales Wellington Welsh Western Front winter Wirral Ynys Mon





Leave a Reply