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


  • FROM THE RUINS

    You are old enough now to remember this.

    The overhead power line at the cottage

    meant we could not fly the new kite there.

    I knew a field five minutes away

    with a ruined medieval chapel

    and a view down the slope to a bay

    where hundreds of souls drowned in a fabled storm.

    But we told you of the space and the wind.

     

    Your daddy showed you how to fly the kite

    while your mummy, grandma and me went

    to church! Vestiges of paint remained

    though the weathers of centuries had scrubbed

    the internal walls of most of the murals.

    Through the arches of the chancel window,

    we saw you flying your kite: serious,

    already skilled by a good teacher.

     

    You managed the controls, intuitively

    aware of aero dynamics, like

    some latter-day Daedalus, as the kite,

    mass produced sky blue plastic from China,

    bucked and soared in the prevailing westerly.

    Rightly oblivious of history,

    you were a five year old Benjamin Franklin

    looking to steal heaven’s thunder and lightning.

     

     

     

     



    One response to “FROM THE RUINS”


    1. Steve Crewe Avatar
      Steve Crewe

      Do memories of grandchildren stick because they are closer in time or because we have more time to appreciate them not being so intimately wrapped up in the role of parenting?

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