| georgettooul 
 
 
 
 Driving through the
Conwy Valley
 It insignificates,
 you say - nature’s reckoning
upsides of
 structural aesthetics: smooth
green rolls
 vye good roofing; but litter
piles
 the valley and we’re steeped
in grey,
 lung-cuffed; still gets us
 
 and nature’s wrecking:
 the roadside heather killed,
 
 nothing like air, plants,
through
 the throatsoot - a little
moor left
 
 and down, here and there.
 I shiver
 and breathe in the sepia dust.
 
 I’d like to think, I say, the
dinosaurs
 were more brutal, that a
bulldozer’s teeth
 won’t bite like a T Rex into
the earth;
 but they’re hungerless
chainsmokers,
 carbon-stained after a full
day driving
 CBs up slateheaps - a
mountain gathers
 
 our eyes into the thinning,
 us together precipitated,
 a sliver of breath,
hinterlands in a sepia dusk,
 
 but this earth’s bill
 gullies
wide –
 an invert mountaintop will;
 slopes uplittered with
discard;
 nature’s guts; the easy
scrape - I point
 a finger from the backseat –
 the air
turns bad.
 
 We’ve had centuries to obtuse
nature’s
 irrelevant kalpas, to lose
the rollcall
 of old photograph’s hills and
their older contours,
 staggered by quarries.
 
 Love on a Monday Evening
 
 Today I felt fear and it was
the grandest thing –
 like the crown of my head
would lift off.
 Not a leaf could have flipped
on its back in the wind
 
 that I wouldn’t have noticed.
 An Arab sat opposite me on
the train.
 I had taken the first
carriage,
 
 the one we had imbued with
likely death
 in a way we only can
substantiate for each other.
 My fingers filled with static
and my blood turned
 
 to white noise. I could
describe him for you,
 a quick photo-fit sketch, but
mostly it was his stubble
 and the wart on his left
cheek,
 
 like in news reports. I have
a spot in the same place
 on my right cheek. You’ve
never called me
 a terrorist when I’ve not
shaved for that long. Mostly
 
 I have been supporting myself
on wire link fences
 looking at each partition of
waste land,
 square by square, until the
police move me on.
 
 Mutatis mutandi
 
 The framework for the virus
is always a living being. The virus is a burglar. The virus crowbars
into cells and scavenges. The virus spreads by intimate contact. The
framework for the virus is always a living being. Hence the virus is a
rapist. But the virus is fragile. The virus needs appropriate cells
within the host. Outside of the host cells, the virus dies. The virus
crowbars into cells. City, give me my meat. The virus is fluid nearly a
living burglar. The virus scavenges appropriate cells once within. The
host crowbars. The scavenges the intimate framework the. Outside
contact the virus the virus. Always a rapist. Being fragile hence zero
appropriate. Host the virus cells the cells the virus. The appropriate
framework.
 
 Luctuare
 
 1.
 These fur-stepped arms with
red fist-mangles,
 black on the bough and
cherried.
 The hub of growths and wombs
 where cells make entrances
and empty
 with uniform speckle
 in crimson speckle.
 
 He only
 stands and waits to sow the
threads with form,
 then stoops a moment less and
the knife
 from its womb strikes and
slops a place from its armoury.
 
 And countries of cells
disappear, lava-dowsed,
 unquartered and quadrangled
 sliced into strophes.
 
 The background radio is
crusted
 with a lecture on growth and
wombs
 spindled in the crimson
speckle of limbs,
 as the stanley shapes each
island’s edge.
 
 Cells trace the speckle and
spindle,
 they bump and meld and here
they will
 discuss in a soundproof room
how the Statue
 of Liberty can sit next to
Muhammad’s bloodline
 without consuming itself,
node by node.
 
 2.
 He has mapped veins and this
and that,
 arteries, fire exits,
speckled heat around
 myths of Ui and Ubu, Homer
and Wren.
 
 He has taken cell by mean and
median,
 sketched a normal in a floor
plan
 and postured figures like
bobbed apples
 on X-ray tables and in nests
of fray and damp mould,
 quartered and drawn, where
girders wait
 for their crimson shroud.
 
 His arms are hung with
rivers, cells lava in his hand.
 This god will fling his
messages twice wrong around
 the earth, having said:
 
 “I have done
 with carpets and measure,
done with the city
 and the idea of land, done
with the excision
 of malignant countries within
continents,
 bricks and scaffolding,
lava-filled or toxified,
 and I have done with the
channels of cells
 and their crossing along the
cut nodes
 and I shall hang my stanley
in the armoury.”
 
 3.
 Dough-damp when he married
the vines,
 he drugged through the
stonewall trailing
 the harsher histories that
come from taken names:
 genes remember the river’s
green fronding,
 the sickle cutting cells from
platelets,
 fruit wassailed from the
blood’s mimesis.
 He permitted the city to
shuttle to, into the soil
 and registered his heart in
the gavel echoes
 of his stomach, the cavities
excised from his bloodrivers,
 done with the sharp
superstitions brought on
 by conspiracies, done with
the rot along the sword;
 and he left for the dry,
crushed, important corners,
 but:
 
 “Never cutting the wood
 is hard and biting bread
 so soft, like moss-stepping
 after the thresh of winter.”
 
 He found happiness pressed
like an axehaft
 in the bole of his hand,
hardship always-sheafed
 in the fields, but he carved
his huge rock sideways
 across the plough lines and
furrowed
 his middle-gnarled olive skin.
 Trees dustied the shade into
ridges
 of half-finished deerways,
only ever the water
 bearing furrows. He wanted
life like a rug,
 a tunnel in the thorns, the
lived-in here
 for so long against the uncut
mountain wall,
 past what a loaf resembled
inside cities
 and even the cut cloth of
patchwork rural,
 the cankered enclosures on
the unborderable,
 trees planing the area of
homestead
 
 “The green coat all beyond
 the plots of unlucky hardwood
fat,
 own from the more than
anything
 else, the river, the river
over all,
 spilling shade eventually
entirely.”
 
 It was no problem before him.
 “Division still is its people,
 my children, my walnut trees,
 the thaws that come, the
river bloats.”
 
 Oh, it was no problem before
him, but:
 “People have such beautiful
golden crusts.”
 
 Icon of
St. George
 
 ‘There is
but one theme for ever-enduring bards;
 And that
is the theme of War.’
 --Walt Whitman
 
 1. Dhrakon
 I utter it as you ask:
en-masse
 take
‘spear’ to mean Regime Change
 call your shield alone my
hearth’s contested embers.
 
 Who fears this haft
 this
missile?
 How shall I carry this wood
 into
the desert?
 Like Christ, lashed
 
 Waves tongue the alien shore
 PAINT YOUR CLOCKS--
 
 O the black ships! O
 the fierce ships!
 Red war fats our sails.
 
 You have no need for time, now
 PAINT YOUR CLOCKS--
 
 On screens
 walls
 canvasses
 there are many names for dragon.
 
 When I dream
 serpents concentrate
 Democracy in my ear.
 
 2.
Underground
 
 ‘Blair anesti! Alithos
anesti!’  *
 
 Erect me in Trafalgar cast in
bronze
 so it is possible for me to
be seen constantly in the act of
 battling serpents.  This
is my policy—
 
 the pendulum of tides, time
signified by strokes,
 the fleet waves come to this
shore like hounds
 
 My spear is newly risen; O my
bow – if I had it –
 would unfold these
clouds.  We’ll shoot the dog
 when it comes to our shores—
 
 But what to mine in the hills
 in the dark? A lantern
educates the mist
 
 I make oaths of Christ’s
wounds
 as he sails for the desert
 to make fat war.  I
strike and—
 
 χουντας crash to the beach at
night.
 
 
 * Blair anesti! Alithos
anesti! – Blair is risen! He is truly risen!
 Χουντας – juntas
 
 3.
November 17th
 
 ‘In all the dominions of the
gods
 only Death allows no place
for sweet hope.’
 --attributed to either
Alkaios or Sappho.
 
 You say this spear is paper
in my hands.
 How do I explain this: what
blueprint
 can I sketch for terror? The
artist, only,
 he clocks the first lines.
 
 Sundown scales
the howling waves
 
 O Patrick, when you sent your
snakes –
 those cords – to us, I spoke
blood from the shore.
 If I could move these hands
would I
 lay this spear down?
 A lie howls behind my words
 
 Don’t tell the
children this; don’t let them
 throw our voices like pebbles
 before the waves have smoothed them.
 
 I wait on the beaches. My
spear points out to sea.
 
 4. Iskra
 
 The lock of foes is
silence,
 the balance of hand to throat
 on the pivot a spearlength
long.
 In that launch all sound was
spent
 except speculation: to be
tough on serpents
 and the causes of, the reel
and sway of victimisation,
 tongue-edit, counter strike,
myth of the dead.
 
 Two thousand eight hundred
and fourteen since
 and falling. Before the next
explosion, mute
 the American airwaves wash to
an oblong
 hiss: we watch what’s
conquered, rent
 the sky’s report; doctored
tape drags on
 past safe spectators: on one
side fundamentalism,
 the other throat
dumb-glotted, myths of the dead.
 
 5.
Revolution
 
 When Nature swallowed
its tail
 I painted a man in sheepskin
 cutting his brother’s throat.
 
 I clumped hair in thick white,
 edged his olive arms
 from under the cloak.
 Beyond his shoulder
 where the desert
 reddened into the sky
 I needed no motion to show
 the stripe of the Dead Sea.
 
 When nature swallows its tail
again
 I’ll film it on eight
millimetre
 grained monochrome.
 My hands will shake
 for that ‘home movie effect,’
 I’ll digitally master a Dolby
Surround,
 trace in your favourite
 cartoon characters to point:
 Look here,
hey-oh
 here where the Dragon was
slain
 like any other Saturday
morning, look,
 the water doesn’t move
without our
 Special Effects.
 
 
 
 
 
        
          
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 georgettooul
 
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