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


  • BONANZA

    When the village – which is set in the foothills

    of Mount Carmel, in the hinterland

    between the coastal cities of Acer

    and Haifa, and blessed with seven springs –

    had been ethnically cleansed, its villagers

    exiled or unaccounted for, its name changed,

    it became an artists’ colony,

    attracting painters, sculptors, musicians,

    composers, poets, playwrights, novelists,

    film makers from all over the nascent state.

    The pristine forests of native pine, oak,

    alder, laurel, it was surrounded by,

    were replaced with stands of European trees.

    The stone houses were refurbished or razed;

    the school became an exhibition centre;

    the mosque a café called ‘Bonanza’.

     

    The original village was founded,

    it is said, by one of Saladin’s

    commanders. Its abundant harvests

    of wheat, sesame, carob – sheltered

    from the prevailing north westerly winds

    by the surrounding woodland, watered

    by the perpetual seven springs – were sold

    for centuries in the ancient markets

    of Haifa and Acer.

     

     

     


    2 responses to “BONANZA”


    1. Alan Horne Avatar
      Alan Horne

      Thank you for the poem, David. I think that this and the previous three poems (‘Kafka in Berlin’, ‘The Glass Ocarina’ and ‘Speaking of Stones’) form an excellent series of responses to the present situation in Gaza. I don’t know if you see them as a series, but for me they certainly work as one.

      1. David Selzer Avatar

        Thank you, Alan. I always try to post a quintet of poems that are linked in various ways. ‘Wintering in Venice’, I hope, reflects some, at least, of the general themes of the previous four pieces.

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