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


  • GLIMPSING GODS

    That evening in the Poseidon Lounge of our

    5 star clifftop hotel, spa & resort –

    with the tideless Mediterranean

    lapping soundlessly, timelessly out of sight –

    there was something about the in-house

    entertainment team’s announcing

    the week’s festivities, some gaucheness perhaps,

    an enforced glee, which reminded me

    of school camp on the Lleyn Peninsula

    the August I was nine, and we ate

    Wagon Wheels round the fire, and told jokes

    about Hitler, the war being recent.

     

    The first day I woke anxious at dawn, and peed

    in my sleeping bag. I told no one, and slept

    in damp bedding for however many days

    and nights we were there in the ex-army

    ridge tent, vast, dark, noisome. Even in sun I

    shivered and drifted as my fever rose –

    and nobody knew. On Porth Neigwl beach,

    or Hell’s Mouth, where Atlantic rollers roar

    I dreamt –  beyond my insouciant fellows’

    paleness in the shimmering and pulsing waves –

    I saw a glistening, slate grey dolphin

    rise and fall, effortlessly, endlessly.

     

     

     

     



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