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


  • ALMS

    On a strip of unfenced scrubland – adorned

    with scattered wild roses white and pink –

    between the main road and our apartment,

    a Roma family had pitched a low tent

    of sun-bleached canvas, beneath two stunted

    umbrella pines, set up a cooking pot

    and tied their horse to a tree with a long tether

    so it could graze on whatever was there.

    There were three of them: a middle aged couple,

    and an old woman – the women in black,

    the man as tall, lean and brown as the horse.

    Each morning the two women, the younger

    carrying a striped, faded folding chair,

    would walk down the hill to the small town’s

    supermarket, where the elder would sit

    until siesta, hand outstretched, silent.

    The couple would make favours to sell

    from chamomile, pimpernel, lavender.

     

    One early evening as we watched ‘Who wants

    to be a millionaire’ to improve

    our limited knowledge of the language –

    questions and answers being sub-titled –

    we began to hear from somewhere outside,

    despite the air con and the tv,

    a voice in extremis. We pressed ‘Mute’,

    turned off the a/c and opened the window.

    We could see three seated figures illumined

    by the cooking fire.  One of the women,

    we guessed the younger, appeared to be

    haranguing the other in a strident,

    unceasing monotone. We saw no one

    in the windows of the walled villas

    on the opposite side of the road

    and ‘Who wants…’ continued loudly throughout

    the apartments. We had understood nothing.

     

    Next morning, the routine was as usual:

    the horse cropping, the favours, the begging.

    None of their temporary neighbours

    seemed to be concerned about whatever

    farce or tragedy they had not observed

    or curious in any way about

    this threesome and their horse. Nobody

    appeared to have been outraged. No one

    was holding a placard demanding

    whatever someone in our smug nation

    would have demanded. Perhaps only those

    for whom impoverishment

    and tyranny have not yet become

    abstractions can tolerate charity

    among wild rose bushes.

     

     

     


    2 responses to “ALMS”


    1. Ashen Venema Avatar

      I can see the Roma family between umbrella pines.
      Love the contradiction, and the last verse …

      … Perhaps only those
      for whom impoverishment
      and tyranny have not yet become
      abstractions can tolerate charity
      among wild rose bushes.

    2. Alan Horne Avatar
      Alan Horne

      I’m still chewing over this one, David. Partly because of the scene-setting, which really stuck in my mind. But it also made me think of people you see sometimes, conducting a furious argument on their mobile phone, disregarding the others around them. I always thought they must be a bit disinhibited, and maybe they are. But your poem made me think that perhaps they just have nowhere else to conduct the argument. In the houses that my parents grew up in, any argument was readily audible to all the neighbours. We now live in a house where you’d be hard put to yell loudly enough for the next-doors to hear. That’s progress!

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