Authors: Fred Simpson
the reels to scream.
The two who brought new rods meanwhile
had coffee slosh like washing in their bowels.
They reached for sugared ginger and dropped
their swaying knots;
while at the stern burnt sailor arms were
striking, bending, gaffing
out great coloured fish both steel and bronze
without a glance.
The father and the son meanwhile, though sick, were
hoping for a snap to honour just one fish, but
every fish that one could eat was brained and
put on ice,
while barracuda (even shark) was cursed and
slashed then flung aside like factory waste
to flap around as further bait for
barracuda (even shark).
By noon the sea was flicking white and
lurching at the boat, the men were drunk,
their bin was blood and lines
were ordered out.
The welcome motor puffed alive, the anchor
clanked and slewed as it was crudely winched
aboard. The two where they had spewed
sat still, ignored.
The travel back was best forgot but the
vessel reached the harbour calm with no
one drowned, no one harmed; no one
but the bream.
Stiff fish were dealt out on the wharf and each
went off with more than he could freeze. Even
they (the father and the son) were given
one to gut;
but when they reached their mother-wife, whom
they had hoped to please, they could not
raise another knife and curve it through
the fish.
So settling for a simpler dish of turnip
stew and beans, they wrapped their golden
prize in foiled tin and gave it to
the trees.
Opposite, on the bank
of the slow and final river, Ant
ducks, their paddle feet no
match for cocks' and hens',
hurry running in a flurry
of tail and neck, hissing and
nipping while their opponents
rape and scrape and peck.
A boy no older than Alice,
(part-time butcher bringing
breakfast rather than blade),
drops slops from his mother's
bucket, while his dog (also
white like Alice), yaps with
imperium at their bleary
buffalo shackled in the shade.
Ant! A brother in another
world illuminated by ineffable
text which I can float to for a
visit. He was no older than
Alice when the cobra killed his
ducks, and, when I get to pay
my visit, I will gather down
and place it in his chalice.
Like ice against enamel
the wood coal squeaks
as xylem splits and phloem
spits out fat-hot sap,
and smoke â the alluring
fume â curls unmolested
into spirits, not all solemn;
but no one speaks.
Up then, up the lichensmothered
trunk it creeps,
smudging one by one
the witch-long walnut
digits, and licks them dry,
dry as tongue, eburnean
sculptures, not all solemn;
but no one speaks.
And further still, through
halted winter night, it seeks
to filter constellations
that I know but cannot
name, primal/parent smoke,
the burning eyes of children's
hopes, not all solemn;
but no one speaks.
Imagining is chemical,
sugar-powered kiss and collision,
electrified ingredients
gathered from experience
to zip, then zip undone;
molecules conjuring up song
and insurrection; catalysts
acting moon, hurrying love;
enzymes throwing flares
for Archimedes.
Even Proust, endorphin-poor,
was gifted sparks of stinging joy
from chemistry â atom-rich
lit-words;
while Einstein
had a Bunsen in his brain.
I was dreaming
when she broke her plate, dreaming
fragmentally, coupling infant and old, smelling
sugar burning and my father's gorgonzola,
resigned, primed - and she shook me
less than she did
the chimneys. Already
I was underground!
          It was easy then
to offer my sprung neck with the dying
calm of a trapped gazelle â even
with froth.
          But as suddenly she stopped (like
Daniel's lion) and chance was gone.
There was no end
and no substantial harm.
I had to find my shoes â perhaps a comb â and
follow them down, down,
until we hurried out to
reach the sanctuary of night.
          I looked up, up
at the frozen stars,
and focused on the cluster that
warmed me all those years ago.
I thought that they might know,
from their vantage point, whether
I was riding on a blue, revolving hearse, whether
they could cut me free.
I have always trusted in silence
To explain. No, perhaps not always but
Rather since the present never is and words
My mouths have uttered have uttered up a fence;
Since then!
I should have known from boyhood
When lemons shared were sweet, when
Chicken talk cut silent for a nimbus or a
Hawk. Then, of all times, I should have understood;
Since then!
As when the desperate bucking stopped and
Slowing calm brought sorrow joy and now
Was palpable as passing air and we were poised
As one. That was when to mute and make a stand;
Since then!
Or even now when now is not and Helen
Leaves with planes arriving, leaves us Paul to take
The driving, I must entrust the gone to silence
To still the peptide hurt of when;
Since then!
No secret can be kept from flung birch seed when
the wind is up to it, when the irascible wind bends
Frost branches till they cower low,
holds them so, then
lets them go.
Like Roman catapult it sends
the seed, like crazy grain it scatters round,
like whale sperm it sprays the ground;
and we are left to stop the nose
to wax the safe before it knows.
But still it penetrates the darkest, darkest spot,
where mould stays moist, where archived thought not
folded in and hidden like a blush, not
coded locked, may find that it has won and we have got
no secret kept, no secret yet that we can take
from flung birch seed when the summer blows,
when it really blows, and flowers break.
Exempt, absorbing blue,
devoid of all but filtered light,
the sky looked down
impartially, and drew
the faintest veil over night.
It witnessed, without
affect, and without the
prerogative of right,
a bird attached to fireworks
take flight, explode,
and then ignite.
Staring from an oscillating face,
unprotected and pocked
by the arrows of expanding time,
the moon has no memory
of birth. It was burst from the
belly of a blasted earth, and held,
umbilically,
by a mother's mysterious force.
She of course is losing
her grip, but imperceptibly,
(her foetus won't snap free):
She's tilted with pride
and drugged by monotonous spin.
It will take an infinite warp till
she sees his face
recede with the diminishing
pull of the tide.
If Death insisted that you choose
between breathing out and breathing in
harmonicas would argue that you couldn't lose,
flutes that you couldn't win;
but harps would say that you need no breath,
would see no gain from either choice,
for they have donned the shrouds of Death
and stay suspended in its voice.
The moon subsumes the sun,
surreptitiously, like a phagocyte
a mite, dimming day into night,
using tentacle, not bite,
choosing fear before fright -
the moon subsumes the sun.
Act Two, scene four, line 1.
Hawk sight and dog scent, plus
the touch of Keller,
might help us
to travel chemical, to reach
a bottom quark,
or even dark
matter for that matter.
Throw in the blind
for their hearing, (and,
if he doesn't mind,
a raging chef), then my goodness
we would soar
high, or even bore
like moles into the molten.
Unexpectedly the ice-stone
sank, where the heart berths,
tethered if you know your anatomy
to a desolate suburb
of flat and featureless terrain
in the brain â without arched mountains
as a backdrop, without caressing
sycamore for shade â a pastel
zone, a wither zone.
And to dissolve the stone
he sought the chaos of the centre,
where crickets shrieked,
where tree stems offered sweet
latrines for dog and drunk,
where rhythm beat the terror
out of night, alone.
Safely placed on the moon
I watched the earth spill
yolk, as it split into two.
Dust smoked, and cups
of crust lost poise,
while water tried to fall.
I saw one continent break
into bits, like chocolate,
and another buck the way
loose wire does when
live. To be honest I could
have given up and cried,
because the rest of the sky
took absolutely no notice.
I had the option of staying
on the moon, of making a
permanent home there, but
everyone had gone, everyone;
so I reattached my wings
and flew towards the sun.
I look out from the living
without the clarity of youth,
towards history, arriving
by light at light speed, late.
Previous suns, spelling an
elemental tale, feign
nonchalance, and blink;
too remote to influence
the living, (driven by reliable
light), to think. Instead they
look in, towards silos of brutal
waste, greed and ambition.
I am past wishing and prefer
apparition, the unsettling
hologram, the gossamer
sliver of pearl in gas lace.
At equinox
when light and dark divide
he fetches tools. Hand
trowels, fowl droppings, collected
seed; and turns
the hibernating soil.
His neck corrects
for gravity with chalk
on chalk, and weightless grains
are lifted pinched
between his father's bones.
In ancient
brain his mother, thin
in cotton, leads him past
the angled fig. Past
rock that clipped his toe.
They fling dry seed
and dip their biscuit halves in
tea. Next thought she calls
him round from play. They
scan, indelibly, an oblong
joy. His feet stick firm
in dry dust, and
he startles like wing.
With thick saliva tasting of
kiss, he stoops to rake
then wet the modern earth.
Nails and implements are washed
clean, the dog is given a stick; and
he waits for colour.
I believe in luck!
Shot â or not â by a ricochet.
Squashed like a frog when a block
collapses â or not.
I forfeit hymn,
outrage and despair. The
elements are indifferent. They
obey physics, not prayer; they
jump to commands from a seething
earth writhing â or resting â flailing
their arms when it storms â combing
their hair when it calms.
I believe in luck!
Caught in the gaze of a
lion â or eaten up.
A fitful dream (the type
provoked by alcohol or meat)
is like running in toffee.
The most that one can
hope for is to meet
a kind ghost.
Last week in such a dream
(it could have been the heat)
I met my mother.
I knew it was my mother
because the arms were hers
and because she wore my feet.
I tried, like any boy would, to
touch her cheek and speak,
but hand and tongue were wrapped
in web, and weak. I tried
once more to reach her face, but