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


  • EXTERMINATE THE BRUTES

    For Alex Cox

    ‘I am strongly in favour of using poison gas against uncivilised tribes.’ Winston Churchill

    As usual, he dresses for town
    in anticipation of the King’s summons –
    which never comes. After breakfast, he reads
    The Times and the Daily Telegraph, notes
    Ghandi’s lenient sentence of six years
    in prison without hard labour – then,
    reflecting on unrest throughout the Empire,
    puts on his smock and his homburg and strolls,
    cigar lit, the short walk to his studio.
    He pours a small portion of Johnny Walker –
    the bottle kept always with a clean glass
    on the bench he sits on to paint – and adds
    a measure of Vichy water. He is working
    on a painting of his son reclining
    in a deck chair on a terrace in Leghorn.
    After the third glass he dreams as usual.

    He captures Peter the Painter personally
    at the Siege of Sidney Street. Gallipoli
    is a famous victory. He leads
    his country in war and is returned to power
    by an ever so grateful nation. He wakes
    and paints in the features of his wayward
    son named for his own wayward father.

    After the fourth he dreams again. He persuades
    the King, at last, to order the razing
    of Liverpool as punishment for
    the seamen’s strike and the policemen’s strike.
    At first light on a soft summer dawn
    the dreadnought battleship HMS
    Nemesis drops its anchors opposite
    Wallasey Town Hall and trains its 15 inch
    guns firstly on the Three Graces. He wakes
    suddenly as he always does knowing
    that, viewing the devastation from the
    Avro Bison flying north above
    the ruins of West Derby Road, he would see
    the few Celts who survived fleeing to where
    they had no place, the Lancashire hinterland –
    west to the lush, orderly market gardens
    of The Fylde and east to the cotton towns,
    bustling, regimented. He has a fifth,
    lights a cigar and strolls back for lunch.

     

     

    Note: the poem was first published by Exterminating Angel Press – http://exterminatingangel.com/eap-the-magazine/exterminate-the-brutes/

     

     

     


    4 responses to “EXTERMINATE THE BRUTES”


    1. Ashen Avatar

      A wide sweep, focussing on Churchill, a different frame on his remarkable fame, for which the nation seems forever grateful.
      Not that familiar with English history, I looked up the 1775 Liverpool Seamen’s Revolt, and found myself admiring the guts of the seamen.
      I suppose after 4 Johnny Walkers and several cigars, one aquires a certain distance on world affairs.

    2. David Selzer Avatar

      The reference in the poem is to the merchant seamen strike which began in Liverpool in 1911 and became nationwide. It’s mentioned in this poem – https://davidselzer.com/2013/06/laissez-faire/. The revolt you mention is new to me. Many thanks for bringing it to my attention, Ashen.

    3. Bonnie Flach Avatar
      Bonnie Flach

      Ah, the other side to ol Winston. My oh my you write so well!

    4. George Westgarth Avatar
      George Westgarth

      I have read, and reread, your latest works, David, but I keep returning to Churchill. From his days when he uttered such obscenities in an arrogance born of his upbringing, did he mellow and mature, and learn to appreciate, if not respect, the value and values of his fellow-men?

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