Archive for December, 2010
THE SUBURBS OF FOLLY
Posted by David Selzer in Poetry on December 18th, 2010
OR CARE IN THE COMMUNITY
People new to the neighbourhood soon notice,
rising from one of the walled gardens
or the terraced yards, an occasional
bird call – wood pigeon or even cuckoo?
Distracted by the previous owners’ always
doubtful detritus, it takes them longer
to realise the sounds are human though
of indeterminate age and gender.
Exchanging a Victorian madhouse
for a gentrified Victorian suburb,
making ambiguous bird noises rather
than rocking to and fro in the urine-stink
must be better – but no less sad, no more
purposeful, still unconscionable.
HERONS IN THEIR HABITATS, LOVERS IN THEIR LIVES
Posted by David Selzer in Poetry on December 18th, 2010
i
A heron – self-motivated, self-contained, aloof – stands,
between a potted phormium and a wooden Buddha,
on the roof of a houseboat on the Prinsengracht in Amsterdam,
two metres or so from passing cyclists on the embankment
and the nervous tourists queuing for Anne Frank’s house.
ii
A heron – undisturbed, unconnected, elsewhere – perches securely
on a fallen oak beside a Cheshire pond near the motorway,
and the cargoes and the cars bound for the docks
slow almost imperceptibly as they pass.
iii
A heron wades at the water’s edge by Beaumaris pier: an accomplished,
stilt-walker’s strides – elegant, certain, considered, entertaining.
The setting sun casts our close shadows on the planking.
In the distance, cloud shadows cross Snowdonia.
And we say, as we always say, ‘This is so beautiful’:
its disparateness; the stillness of the air; the calm of the straits;
the prism of colours; the indifference of the heron…
which, suddenly and hugely, takes to the air, calling, calling…
NOT ANYTHING TO SHOW MORE FAIR
Posted by David Selzer in Poetry on December 18th, 2010
A league from Hoole is Westminster Bridge,
Ellesmere Port. Like Wordsworth, I composed on it.
The brick replica replaced the level
crossing, after the Borough had built
the Civic Hall in the boom time: Shell, Vauxhall,
overspill estates – a working class city.
Jobs went, the bridge stayed, no one made jokes.
The high street, strait, terraced, encompassed
all: Big Mac and sometimes on Sundays
Russian sailors window-shopping. Before me,
framed by the TSB and the Loyalist
Club lay the M53: beyond,
the Mersey – silent, still.


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