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


  • SIDE BY SIDE

    For you and me, like Henry Moore’s bronze
    kings and queens, there is something very
    special about sitting together
    on a public seat with a majestic view…

    ***

    On the erstwhile Exxon Valdez ride
    at the ’90s Epcot Centre, plunging
    above Alaska with a dying friend…

    Snow falling on Halkyn Mountain over
    the estuary from Parkgate promenade
    and a fire briefly flaring then dying
    by Flint Castle on the distant shore…

    A child begging on the corniche at Luxor,
    singing, ‘Michael, row the boat ashore,’
    and the crowded ferry crossing the Nile…

    ‘John Williams, Plumber, A Deganwy Lad’,
    with a view of Penmaenmawr – Wagnerian,
    mauve against the bright sky above Ynys Môn –
    the bench washed away in a freak storm…

    Beside The Lake in Central Park, early
    September before 9/11,
    the row boats empty in the humid air…

    ***

    Relaxing on the cruiser at Edfu
    with mint tea after a temple visit –
    on the road, a camel and donkey
    passing in the back of a pick-up…

    On the steps of the Community Hall
    where Mandela trained to box, next to
    a serious queue for a bouncy castle…

    Opposite Conwy Castle, the curlews
    and the shelduck on the sand banks at low tide –
    in the channel along the far bank
    a water skier buzzing, buzzing…

    Next to the river and the Peter the Great
    fantasy statue, in the Monument Park,
    with Dzerzhinsky facing his future…

    Market Street, Jozi, with the theatre
    and bookstalls – and its environs safe
    again but at what cost to the homeless
    who squatted in the windowless buildings…

    ***

    On the topmost row of the amphitheatre
    at Epidaurus, dusk settling among
    the olive groves and the tourist buses…

    On the beach at Alvor – where Portugal
    ceded Mozambique to Frelimo
    in a country club – with North Africa
    seemingly just beyond the horizon…

    In the grounds of the Hector Pieterson
    Museum, with the liberated traffic
    of Orlando West careering by…

    Etna rising in mist from Taormina’s
    Giardini Villa Communale
    with its avenue of olive trees,
    each a memorial to the naval dead…

    In Polesdon Lacey’s rose garden,
    designed by the playwright Sheridan,
    with cattle lowing below the terrace…

    ***

    Ah, to have such promising prospects, the first
    of Disneyland, the last of England – somewhere,
    looking forward, to imagine the worst,
    to speak of the past, to learn to know blessings…

     

     

     


    3 responses to “SIDE BY SIDE”


    1. John Moorhouse Avatar
      John Moorhouse

      Beautiful. I want to go to all those places immediately.

    2. Alan Horne Avatar
      Alan Horne

      I liked this, David. I noticed myself skipping over the individual items in order to grasp the poem as a whole, and that made me think of the possibilities of a list, as somewhere where surprises could be hidden in plain sight, catching us unaware, like the vision of the donkey and camel in the back of the truck.The notion of joint prospects, of looking outwards, is great way of making a love poem.

      1. David Selzer Avatar

        I like your notion of ‘surprises…hidden in plain sight’, Alan, but have wondered if the poem – the list – were too long, too repetitive. On balance, it didn’t seem so when published and hoped the watery theme would act as a motif.

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