POETRY

BORDER CONTROL

The makeshift town of Trigozon, infamous

for its cooking pots and funerary urns

made from the Atrigo river’s oily mud,

has been completely razed. Marauders

from the Southern Deserts are suspected.

The surviving townspeople – the usual

motley of foreigners with their jabbering,

their ailments, their wretched chattels,

and their incessant, wordy liturgies –

are slowly moving here to the walled

and timeless city of Marazon.

Meanwhile beyond the fast flowing Atagorsh

in the north, there are rumours of hostiles

massing on the Sparse Plains, with their goatskin tents,

and their restless herds of ragged horses.

 

Our Rulers have decreed that only

native-born citizens of Marazon

will cross the Atagorsh, and that migrants

from the south will be kept outside the walls,

though it is rumoured some are already here

cunningly disguised as denizens.

 

‘The Gods are angry,’ the High Priestess warns,

‘Before peace there will be havoc.’ The death squads

are on stand-by in their barracks.

 

 

THE POINT OF VANISHING

For some months after his death his study smelt

of the locally rolled cigars he had smoked

every day since he had been a youth.

One of his favourite smoking places

was the west-facing window of the study.

He would look along the river valley

towards the point – which he could not see –

where the valley ended and the foothills

of the purple-ridged mountain range began,

and further up where the river narrowed

to a creek, and further still where it became

a spring among the rocks and the sage.

 

All of the room – but the fireplace wall,

the window casement and the door frame –

was lined with shelves from floor to ceiling.

Books, periodicals, and pamphlets – including,

his own poetry collections, once described

as ‘the poetry of the people:

of elevator men; counter clerks

in five and dimes; seamstresses in sweat shops;

waitresses in diners’ – all were placed

in the order in which they had been published.

He claimed he could find any item

at a moment’s notice, and would ask

his visitors to set him a test.

 

On the fireplace wall were photographs – mostly

of his receiving awards, laureateships,

honorary degrees for his poetry.

The exceptions – placed seemingly at random –

were seven copies of the same photograph:

buffalo skulls piled six high, ten wide,

twenty long, a mausoleum of bone

and empty eye sockets. A black man,

in overalls, skinning knife in his right hand,

stood rigidly before the front row

to suggest the scale of the ossuary.

 

The poet was a widower and childless

so bequeathed the house to the nation.

His study was preserved almost exactly

as he had left it – though there was an unsmoked

cigar in the glass ashtray on the desk.

Beside it was an unfinished manuscript,

a poem entitled The Last Passenger Pigeon Shoot:

‘In the river valley the solitary hunter waits,

his twelve gauge loaded with bird shot. He is waiting

for the thinning flock to pass one last time…’

Visitors would always question tour guides

about the empty spaces on the fire place wall.

The guides would mention restoration.

 

The last publication he had placed

on the morning of the day he died remained

unread. It  was a brief mimeograph,

The Great Migration, written and researched

by his neighbour, a local historian,

and describing how the first settlers

in the valley – stone age people,

who had migrated from the far north –

had believed the river’s mountainside source

to be one of the many mouths of God.

 

 

THE DAY AFTER

‘To own a place where God is thought to be palpably present inspires a feeling perilously close to owning God.’

THE ACCIDENTAL EMPIRE, Gershom Gorenberg

 

Once the Empire’s Supreme Command had declared

the Coastal Territory ‘infidel-clean’,

the Empire’s Survey Force – with its tankers

containing drinking water and fuel oil,

its flat-bed lorries with pre-fabricated

accommodation blocks, toilets, showers,

its refrigerated food trucks and its mobile

generators – could proceed with confidence,

noting the drifts of refuse, the leaning

glassless windows, the skewed slabs

of concrete, the intermittent sharp scent

of putrefaction in the dusty air.

 

Occasionally they were surprised

by a bougainvillea still blooming

on a demolished wall, or a wooden shelf

of books still intact in a fallen house,

but the pools of drying sewage, and the piles

of broken furniture were predictable.

 

They established their base in the courtyard

of the Coastal Territory’s Holy Site –

with its fountains and its orange trees –

the birthplace of the Empire’s Patriarch,

and, throughout the cleansing, untouched.

From the arcaded gallery at the top

of the Patriarch’s mosaic-encrusted

tower all of the land could be seen,

the mountains in the east, the sea in the west,

the geometric blocks of streets and gardens –

and, inland, some leagues away, north and south

the Empire’s frontier posts and distant cities.

 

On the first day, the Force began its work

in sub-teams on foot and with drones:

some estimating the amount of rubble,

and the cost of clearing it; others

what should be re-built, for whom and at what cost;

others how the coast and the foothills

might become theme parks and tourist resorts.

 

The children appeared on the second day –

in the ruined shadows of a campus

with a museum, library and a school –

always far off, singly, then in pairs;

by day’s end, perhaps a dozen, some maimed,

some seemingly whole, standing close together,

watching from a distance like a silent,

impassive muster of witnesses.

‘Withdraw’, ordered the Supreme Command.

 

On the third day, after the Survey Force’s

long caravan was safely far beyond

the Territory’s borders, the Empire’s Air Force

carpet-bombed the ruined campus.

 

 

 

 

THE GENIUS SIDE OF KITSCH

An ephemeral art installation by

Yoko Ono entitled Apple

comprising a four foot high acrylic plinth,

a bronze plaque engraved ‘APPLE’, a real, green

apple with a stalk, priced at two hundred pounds –

was part of a 1966

London show: Unfinished Paintings and Objects

By Yoko Ono. One of the guests

invited to the preview was John Lennon.

He saw the apple, took it from the plinth,

bit into it, and put it back – like any

Hooray Henry or Scally scoffing at art.

The artist was speechless, and ‘furious’

she recalled. Lennon apologised,

and later reflected that  ‘…the humour

got me straight away…two hundred quid

to watch the fresh apple decompose’.

He redeemed himself in time, not least

by founding, with colleagues, Apple Music.

 

Fifty eight years later the piece is on show

again in London, part of Yoko Ono:

Music of the Mind, curated by Ono

in her ninetieth year. The gallery

perhaps will acquire the Apple as part

of its permanent collection and allow

each apple to decay in its own time,

inspiring spectators to think of the tree

of knowledge, and the apple of discord.

 

Another piece in the exhibition

is Helmets (Pieces of Sky). Used or

replica World War 2 German helmets

are hanging from the ceiling at waist height,

filled with pieces of sky blue jigsaw –

each one stamped in white lettering with

‘y.o. London ’24’ – for visitors

to take, and join together. Yoko, aged 12,

and her younger brother would leave fire-bombed

Tokyo for the countryside in search

of food, the ambivalent sky above them.

Her multi-media work of nearly

seventy years is ironic, humane,

inventive, resonant, and always the

genius side of kitsch.

 

 

CITY OF CRANES

David Selzer By David Selzer0 Comments1 min read1.4K views

Central London’s daytime northern skyline seems

dominated by a silhouetted

fretwork of cranes. From Bankside, on the south bank

of the Thames, I count, across the river,

west and east of St Pauls, twenty four.

 

The sun sets through them, leaves only their red

warning lights seemingly hanging in the air,

diminished by the white brilliance of blocks

of multi-storied offices empty

of people. Beneath them rats run freely –

along the littered gutters, past the homeless

curled up on cardboard in doorways.  Over there

is Eliotland, Tom’s ‘Unreal city.

Under the brown fog of a winter dawn,

A crowd flowed over London Bridge.

I had not thought death had undone so many’.

 

Though the poet is no longer in Lloyds

counting house on Leadenhall Street,

his illusive city is extant despite

the absence of fog, despite the Blitz, despite

the property speculation, the terrorist attacks

at Fishmongers’ Hall and on London Bridge.

 

Low tide exposes narrow pebbled beaches strewn

with discarded plastic – and folk searching

for the trivia of the past. Above them

the fretwork of cranes turns.

 

 

MERIDIANS AND PARAKEETS

I am sitting on a bench beside the Thames

on a sunny April Saturday at Greenwich,

and watching the boatloads disembark

at Greenwich Pier. They wander through the erstwhile

Royal Naval College, and walk up the hill

to the Royal Observatory. They tread,

in its courtyard, the stainless steel strip

that marks the prime meridian which set

the clocks of a thousand shipping fleets.

I watch the river as it flows softly

past the Isle of Dogs on the opposite bank,

and the sun glint on the topless towers of

Canary Wharf’s Masters of the Universe.

 

I think of elsewhere: across the Hudson

near the Jersey shore, the view from Liberty

Island and Ellis Island of the isle

of Manhattan – its charm, its promise,

its threat – the Twin Towers still intact;

of the stone compass in the cliff-top

fortress at Sagres, the furthest south west point

of Europe, where the Mediterranean

and the North Atlantic meet, where Henry

the Navigator set his naval college,

some of whose graduates made the Slave Coast.

 

The Royal Naval College here, its elegance

and Portland Stone still pristine, was designed,

during the Restoration, by Wren,

Hawksmoor, Vanbrugh. It has become part

museum, wedding venue, grove

of academe. Mature London Plane Trees grow

in its expansive, graceful courtyard.

Rose-ringed parakeets – offspring of escaped pets

originally from India but now

naturalised through much of south east England,

and spreading westwards, and northwards – flit

their vivid green from branch to branch, their calls

squeaking like infants’ toys.