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


  • FIGURES OF SPEECH

    She is scooting on the South Bank, her four years
    sailing without mishap through the crowds –
    multi-national, multi-ethnic, mixed race
    – like a skilled UN negotiator.
    We stop – her choice – at the Galloper.
    She rides sedately, grinning, on a painted
    wooden horse. We stop again – our choice –
    to watch an Australian with a travelled
    face and lived-in voice reprise Houdini’s
    cabinet trick. She is unimpressed
    but enjoys the fifty metre sand pit
    beyond the BFI. At the Tate,
    she watches a brief video – over
    and over – of Henri Matisse wielding
    his draper’s scissors like a pen or brush.
    (Later, she will cut us out of paper –
    parents, grandparents, herself – and paint us
    as cats). We leave for Chinatown and Dim Sum.

    Dusk is settling in Trafalgar Square
    as she eyes the forbidden pools. ‘Eng-er-lond,
    Eng-er-lond,’ chant some youths from a lion’s plinth.
    It is the World Cup’s first match at 10.00.
    We cross to South Africa House where
    a three piece band – drums, lead and bas guitar –
    is playing ‘Money for Nothing’. She dances,
    a Chinese tourist laughs and a rough sleeper
    wakes from his pitch beneath a plane tree
    and salutes us all with an empty bottle.

    ***

    On holiday in Crete, à propos of
    nothing, pleased with herself, she uttered
    her first simile, ‘Sink like guitar.’
    I think of that as we cross the river,
    to return to our hotel near Waterloo,
    and see the shimmering lights – and think of
    Eliot’s ‘I had not thought death had undone
    so many’ and Spenser’s ‘Sweet Thames, run softly
    till I end my song!’ and feel the warmth of
    love and mortality, the themes of
    this harmonious day.

     

     

     


    One response to “FIGURES OF SPEECH”


    1. John Huddart Avatar
      John Huddart

      You have mastered the epistolary style, and turned the everyday into art!
      Reflective, learned and loving – a Prospero amongst poets.

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