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


  • LIVERPOOL, 3RD MAY 1941

    This is one of the great public, civic

    spaces of the world – the museum,

    the library, the gallery, the court house,

    Wellington’s column, the Steble fountain,

    the Empire Theatre, Lime Street Station,

    St George’s Hall,  St John’s Gardens, vistas

    of the river, the Wirral, the Welsh hills…

     

    During the worst raid of the Liverpool Blitz

    the museum was set ablaze – a bomb,

    one of so many, supposedly

    for the docks, that razed history, neighbourhoods.

    My grandmother, Liverpool Welsh – who took tea

    with Buffalo Bill and was offered a place

    in a music hall chorus line but refused,

    being the eldest of thirteen, her Da

    at sea and her Ma at the sherry –

    described to me in detail many times

    the natural history collection:

    stuffed walruses, condors and Don Pedro,

    a retired Barnum and Bailey elephant –

    all immolated, and washed away.

     

    While mummy, daddy, grandma see ‘Evita’,

    she and I make our way to the museum,

    holding hands. I talk about history,

    public and personal – my father,

    a stranger, a London Jew, in transit

    that May Saturday, joining a line

    of desperate buckets. She listens –

    in my company a serious,

    concerned seven year old – and asks if fires

    can ever be put out. ‘Yes, always…

    eventually,’ I say. We decide

    to explore as many floors as we can

    from the top – space, dinosaur poo, bugs

    but have no time for masks and totems –

    and pause, me for rest, her to draw,

    before, leaving a moment for ice cream,

    we walk in the dusk, past the statues,

    up the incline to the theatre crowds.

     

     

    Note: first published April 2017.

     

     

     


    One response to “LIVERPOOL, 3RD MAY 1941”


    1. Mary Clark Avatar
      Mary Clark

      The child’s answer about fire, the moment for ice cream, and the ending of this, are wondrous.

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