The Soldier, Suspended
Shell-shocked blast of red,
Gold and green shrapnel falling;
See the soldier run.
The Last of the East Midlands Rowers
On a bed of wet leaves, the last of the
East Midland Rowers
abandons his boat.
Black muck and rust
– who knew plastic could rust? –
coat the cuttlebone vessel, a thick mesh of memories
clinging to it from the places it has seen.
Once, he’d taken it – brilliant orange and buoyant –
up the grey, churn-watered
Trent, and its sleek bow
cut the river something
biblical.
From there they’d gone east,
paddle to wave and pushing on,
down the estuary canals where
saltwater gifts illicit kisses to
river weeds under
Skegness skies.
Now, though, it sits, damp and lone,
narrow orange lifeline tangled as a
schoolgirl’s braid,
in shallow puddles and fallen leaves.
There is no resentment, though, for boats are not given to
dark moods.
For in its hollow cavity heart, it knows
that no dried-up riverbed, no landlocked city lake,
can rob it of
all it has seen.
The Party One Hundred and Sixty Six Years in the Making
The trees come to life in twilight,
swaying against the late summer
sky in a warehouse rave of
acid yellows,
day-glo oranges,
and the electric blues.
What little green is left hugs to the
Arboretum floor, sipping up
spilled drinks from uneven puddles,
and the tarmac path that splits the scene
leads from
bar
to
bathroom.
Trees live long lives, you know, and to them
time
is
slowed
to a psychedelic crawl, the passing waves of
people, parties, picnics
little more than the after-trail of a
centuries-long trip.
This is it, the magnum oak tree,
the pine de resistance:
the bar is open, drinks are two for one, and
I just saw a sparrow drop an acid tab in an illuminated
tree-top.
And tomorrow morning, when the wind blows,
you may hear a hangover-groan as they
creak
and
crack,
but right now the park is alive and amidst the
purple-drank haze of twilight,
I am too.
Chinese Bell
Never one for yelling, the bell is silent now.
Despite a dragon-scale flank, the
pride of an empire and its four-cornered and
silent protectorate,
there is no flash of cannonball flame here.
“Make peace, be kind” these beasts of war have
scrawled upon their hide in day-glo chalk,
a chimeric clash of cultures marooned in a place with no
love for combat.
See, instead of slaying we prefer to
chase our dragons,
opiate the masses and capture their cannons, and
when the world cries out in admonishment we can roar,
with imperial pride,
“This is heritage, this is history.”
Never one for yelling, the bell is silent now.
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