Berryman and after
I don’t like what the world has
become,
At night, the sprinklers sound like
rain
But I am neither fooled or
consoled. Chase Twichell
… On a wet night in Charing Cross, Soho
–ro
A Greek tragedy: Aeschylus or O’Neill, to counter
too much reality.
Finding on a ‘pile’m-high’ for a £1.00
‘Dream Songs’ – like a monument -
His face stared out from the cover: as if
some Roman Emperor or God.am
The words permeated through as a bat seeking its
infant in the dark.
The way, not standard light; the dark with
another kind of darkness.
The ‘confessional’; intersilent, finding both
backward and backward in forward.
His glasses saw through too, too far – like
looking straight into the sun.
There would a consequence – as when humankind
live the live of god.
Henry had a heart – that was apparent –how could
he not.
Here high lyricism married with black chaos of
the unravelable.
The syntax of the strange path that picks it
travellers.
There is no peace, no stillness, no
sanctuary, November’s lightlessness.
The muse picked the right one. just with a
too larger dream to sing.
First published Danse Macabre
Nov 13
That night – we sat -
we
We sat on the bank although it was
freezing
I smoked my cheap cigarettes
Camels you hated.
The words came in fits and starts – I
felt the ravine –
Your blonde hair – almost so thin it
dissolved away.
You grin and laugh fuelled me inside like
a torch.
I thought of ‘forever’ ‘eternal’ and all
those infinites -
Like you do - and so the nights grew
on-one-into-the-other.
And we learned to see – this place what
became our life. Here
Stepping on – and to the sentence, the
charm and wit.
I rolled on my back and took a draw on
the cigarette.
Humour (I thought would make us) - it
would fail
The gag disguised the meaning - the
serpent is the serpent.
The pregnant night grew on the light we
almost grew to fear
Like an iterant do-gooding-parent - still
there was time.
Down by the tracks the light reflected
around and off the metal
Showing the rails like swords in some
magnificent battle
The night “as I recited ‘we’ll go no more
a roving.’
How good: Fhow tedious, how did Byron, how did
he?es
Hesperus and phosphorus the two sides of
the same coin
Neither both sides seen together the
night as claret
Deep dark and full I’d drink it in
outside of other peoples
Law and other peoples worlds other
worlds.
Our world like all worlds grows old and
dies - the graveyard
Littered with alibi’s epitaphs and
monologues of “what-if’s”
Once you stood up and took a deep breath
smiling and waved
The train that we sat for and waited
patiently for never did arrive.
No comments:
Post a Comment