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


  • THE WAY

    The track ran like a white stream over the heath,
    slow between the wide banks of ferns and heathers
    with their vivid shades of purples and greens –
    and on the horizon the channel shined blue.
    Occasional flints glinted. He lay
    in a dry runnel. He could hear the bees
    labouring about him and, once, a cart
    driven, he guessed, to the coast – and, once,
    a woman singing some local song,
    making her way inland, descending
    into the wooded valley where the bear
    had been stoned to death. He dreamt of the bear
    and the silent mob droving the creature
    into the river. He woke suddenly,
    shivering. Stars sparkled in a moonless sky.
    He rose, stiffly, onto his knees, scanned the heath
    for moving shadows, listened for syllables,
    warm, soft, heard, saw nothing, knew silence
    and stillness and darkness from now would be
    where he moved – he who had been hurdy-gurdy,
    brazen. He walked quickly to the track
    and followed it seawards.

     

     

     



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