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


  • ALIASES

    The Lenin Statue, the new FSB (aka Cheka, NKVD, KGB) HQ  and a new church supported, in part, by Mars pet foods. ©SCES 2000
    The Lenin Statue, the new FSB (aka Cheka, NKVD, KGB) HQ and a new church supported, in part, by Mars pet foods. ©SCES 2000



    We remembered the newsreels with Uncle Joe

    aka Koba the only one in grey,

    so expected a black and white city.

    But the colours astound us, beguile.

    From our apartment – which used to be bugged –

    we overlook what used to be October Square.

    The monumental bronze statue –  of Lenin, V.I.,

    with assorted comrade soldiers and sailors set to march,

    by Gorky Park, over the Crimea Bridge,

    toward the Kremlin – is intact.

    In May, parties of veterans queue to see Lenin

    (erstwhile Ulyanov, V.I.) preserved.

    Behind the Mausoleum, in the garden

    of remembrance, is a bust of Stalin

    (erstwhile Djugashvili, J.V.). Always,

    fresh roses surround it. However,

    in the Sculpture Park, the Great Helmsman,

    in red granite, has had his nose knocked off.

    Putin (sic), V.V. is crowned in the Tzar’s Cathedral,

    the Annunciation.  The double-headed eagle flies.

    Like his forebears, he takes the salute in Red Square.

    They are all dressed up in the uniforms

    of the Great Patriotic War – and the troops

    (not a tenor  amongst them) greet their  little C in C

    with the time dishonoured and oh

    so genuinely moving: “Huzzah! Huzzah! Huzzah!”

    Sometimes, that spring, when we opened the windows,

    we thought we smelled tundra, sea and ice.

    Opposite the Lenin statue, outside the Metro,

    an elderly woman, in a worn, quilted coat,

    sold wild hyacinths. We did not understand

    the price.  She fluttered her hand above her heart.


    One response to “ALIASES”


    1. John Huddart Avatar
      John Huddart

      “We did not understand the price.” It has to be one of your finest, and beautifully split across two lines.

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