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


  • AND WITH A LITTLE PIN

    Flint Castel, Samuel & Nathaniel Buck, 1742
    Flint Castel, Samuel & Nathaniel Buck, 1742

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    On liberty’s last morning, he said mass

    in the Great Tower – the chapel was cold

    as winter. August’s sun warmed the rebels

    riding along the estuary shore,

    their drums silent. He watched from the walls.

    At his back, the seas breaking on Ireland. King

    and Usurper, first cousins, exchanged

    purple words in the base court, a surfeit of

    epithets: bombast, self-pity. Serfs

    were indifferent but Richard’s dog fawned

    on new majesty. The epicure

    who bespoke a coat of cloth of gold

    rode captive from Flint to London in the same

    suit of clothes. Through Chester he was jeered, stoned.

     

    Twenty miles inland,  a sandstone hill

     – sheer to the west – rises from the plain.

    Parliament’s army sacked the castle.

    Westwards there is the estuary’s mouth,

    the livid sea. Above twitching fern,

    a hawk stoops. Stones, flung into the well’s blackness,

    fall through the hill seawards and never sound.

     

    Beeston Castle, Cheshire, Benjamin Pouncy, 1773
    Beeston Castle, Cheshire, Benjamin Pouncy, 1773


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