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


  • SEAFORTH BEACH, SIMONSTOWN, 2009

    ‘The essential characteristic of a nation is that all its individuals must have many things in common – and must have forgotten many things as well.’ What is a Nation? Ernest Renan

     

    Near the restaurant’s toilets, there was a large

    framed print of a photograph of the beach

    full of day trippers from Cape Town by train

    one Christmas/New Year break in the ’50s –

    when it was Slegs Blankes/Whites Only.

    The restaurant’s customers were still white,

    the staff black – by Toyota taxis daily

    from the townships. On the beach, that windy

    September day, African Penguins –

    erstwhile ‘Jackass’ – were braying at the surf.

    A Southern Whale and its young rose close

    inshore and blew… From the bedroom window

    of our three star guest house we could see,

    in the moonlight, a young black man lay down

    to sleep on the grassy bank near the sea’s edge.

    In the morning he had gone. A submarine

    sailed from the naval base, sounding its horn.

    We watched a mist roiling slowly towards us

    and the dark kelp bobbing.

     

     

     


    One response to “SEAFORTH BEACH, SIMONSTOWN, 2009”


    1. Hugh Powell Avatar
      Hugh Powell

      It is the opening of a classic Le Carre, in which we the reader get to finish the story, and place the conflicts and conspiracies in their improper places.

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