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


  • OCTOBER MOON

    That Friday night, a slow moon rose, blood-orange,

    huge, over the sea’s horizon. Trails of clouds

    were silhouetted across its deserts

    like black smoke. Next morning, a drear sea-light

    filled the rented cottage in the dunes

    by the shore. A heron was wading slowly,

    purposefully along the water’s edge.

     

    He had gone to that tiny, remote island

    off the Atlantic coast, accessible

    at low tide across a sand bar, to finish

    his latest book: ‘Looking The Other Way –

    Genocide In Rwanda’. He was working

    on the index. He had reached Complicity.

     

    Prompted by a text from a friend late

    on Sunday he turned on the tv news –

    saw pictures of that Saturday’s massacre:

    edited images of the aftermath

    of the murder of innocence, and real-time,

    incriminating footage of armed men

    oppressing distraught women and children,

    taking hostages for ransom or slaughter.

     

    The days then weeks that followed were lit

    by the graphics of the after effects

    of the bombardment, the deliberately

    chosen response – a life for a life,

    a death for a death, rubble for rubble.

    And gaslit by hours of talking heads

    oozing bombast, lies, and casuistry.

    It was a time too illuminated

    by the courage and humanity

    of the living victims of loss and horror.

     

    Each day he would walk along the shore

    round the island until he could see

    the range of mountains inland across the fields.

    The peaks were increasingly hidden in shifting mists.

    The hedgerows of hawthorn and traveller’s joy

    edging the fields were turning to yellow.

    He would think of the fire-bombing of Dresden,

    of the razing of Lidice, of Stalingrad –

    and of Goya’s painting of two giants

    clubbing themselves to death as they sink

    ever further into a bog, like some

    danse macabre of self-destruction.

    One day he suddenly thought of the books

    in his study at home, a collection

    of sixty years, and was overwhelmed

    by their number, their seeming irrelevance.

     

    He watched the progress of the moon as the month

    waxed and waned: sometimes obfuscated

    by clouds, or smoke, or dust; sometimes bright as

    a ‘bomber’s moon’. The stars appeared. The sun rose

    above the horizon. The sea ebbed, flowed.

    And thousands, thousands of children were slaughtered.

     

     


    One response to “OCTOBER MOON”


    1. John Huddart Avatar

      Obviously a very safe place to send our refugees. A timely reminder.

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