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


  • A PUBLIC MAN

    i.m. David Robinson

     

    At the celebration of his life –

    in an erstwhile garrison church now

    educational centre – there was music,

    applause, laughter, sadness, his cardboard coffin

    with red roses and his panama hat.

    And it was as if he were there – as he was,

    for sure, in the gathered memories

    of the many present and the many,

    in absentia, who had written.

    The order of service commanded

    ‘All Sing The Red Flag’, and printed the words –

    and most did, not just the comrades like us

    who savoured and relished his serious joke.

     

    Gathered outside in the soft May light,

    greeting friends and colleagues then watching

    as the cortège took its gradual leave, we

    found ourselves applauding in that public place.

     

    There are some you cannot believe are dead.

    You would be unsurprised if they turned up

    one day and continued a conversation

    they had begun a week before, a decade.

    So as I walk the Millennium Greenway –

    part of the old Cheshire Lines railway

    recycled (pun intended) – I can imagine

    his cycling towards me, stopping, listening,

    laughing richly at ironies then tell me,

    with charm and gravitas, what I need to know.

     

     

     

    Note: The poem was originally published in May 2015.

     

     

     


    One response to “A PUBLIC MAN”


    1. John Huddart Avatar
      John Huddart

      Never to be forgotten, David. Please repeat, each year.

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