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


  • BRITISH VALUES

    Within furlongs of the refinery,
    the car show rooms and the retail park
    are Viking colonies – for fish and farm
    in the rich, marshy land on the south bank
    of the estuary, where the river’s
    current made a wide, shallow pool before
    the mammoths and the sabre-toothed tigers left.
    Some of the hamlets are part of the town –
    others are down haphazard hedgerow lanes.
    Upstream the sugar ships docked, the slavers sailed.
    In the town, on the railings of the nascent
    mosque erstwhile Wesleyan chapel, beneath
    high rise flats, a pig’s head is skewered
    a couple of streets from the nearest food bank.
    Under the wide arcades of the retail park
    women in burqas stroll.

     

     

     


    2 responses to “BRITISH VALUES”


    1. John Huddart Avatar
      John Huddart

      Liberally Larkinesque – those discursive rhythms. And then the women in the burqas stroll………… in a short line suggestive of whatever futures to come.

    2. Alan Horne Avatar
      Alan Horne

      This month’s poems are very good, David. You must have had a good Christmas! ‘Furlongs’ is great, and the calmness and reflective tone is lovely: the great thing about the women in the burqas is that they’re strolling.

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