Monday, 27 August 2018

Severn Sequence I-X (Special full reading commemorating completion of proof stages of all forthcoming print publications)




Sequence Severn I-X

O joy! Again the farms appear;
Cool shade is there, and rustic cheer:
There springs the brook will guide us
down”.

Matthew Arnold, Resignation.


Severn I

Morning’s dust,
the language is ordinary
and the music is missed

Where the note cuts
in vain - the pulse of a boy
is born into twilight’s trust

Where the fates stuck,
and the sails of separation
wreaked a sad course.

...

Severn II

There is no escaping this.

The dark eventuality of Wales,
in its last regress,
beacons all walking disasters
and makes them wait.

But there is sanctuary in pain.
Beneath our past
there lies a cruder prehistory
bursting the vein.

There is no escaping that.

...

Severn III

Once it was the music made me wonder
what curious work within us calls a pulsing dread
to order. Once it was the colour of the dying
fire made me warm, now the cooling water

forces down the face of my detachment,
and blurs the foamy edges of my vascular reality.

Now the burst of music bores me senseless.

Now the work of silence stirs my bones.

...

Severn IV

I occupy the vacant stretch
of mouth that fed the mental sea
beneath all worrying waters;

I occupy the valleyed brow
what overlooked the sinking of
the sun in industrial winters.

I occupy the weathered faces
staring from suspension bridges
waiting for the welcome sign.
I occupy the nameless wretches,
falling asleep in the usual places,
who washed up in the gutter

and were found dead

beside the river.

...

Severn V

Now I don’t know morning.
In my midday the moon presides,
judging me like a missionary.
While a foreign sky is falling
and the fabric we share collapses in tears
the flood arrives, like an early warning.

And I am left splitting my sides
to blinding tunes in the coarsening rain
on the bank of an inkling tide of blood

running out to a blackened ocean.

...

Severn VI

The land that I avoided is my secret
Wish to run aground against the scarlet rock;

The hand that I evade was my defeated
Will to be disowned by every womaned sea.

The wind that overtakes me is a woman
Song to drown the sounds of dead white men;

The wounds that whip the sail are my emotion
Wrung out on the decks of harboured ills.

The comet that decides me is regretting
Turning back our tale to face the perfect sun;

The constellations burned into my table
Tell the coming stars to force their edges out.

...

Severn VII

It has never been my place,

Sliding further west into the sea
of rising conversation and calamity

To criticise the shore, the certain
knowledge of the face, the rocks -

The chiselled vanity of life
on this planet, this cycling of water.

Or to censure the cause, the unnatural
ebb of the moon and the tide

Against the shocks and starts of being
alive - and becoming a body

In the end. It all goes back to Thales -
I think. Therefore the river

Carries me effortlessly over the border
separating sleep from city life,

Slips into a stolid state of permanence
and icily extinguishes my race.

They say blood is thicker than water,
but it has never been my place.

...

Severn VIII

Our almost incredible
episodal dream
nears the final phases:

Resolution and crises

conspiring like the tide
concede and assert that

nothing will be grieved
in Wales but the memory,

the Unreliable Faculty,

caught like Alzheimer’s
between the infant rocks

of insensitive modernity
and the hardest place in history.

On a clay bed of culture,
I have carved out your identity:

Unimpressionable. Like water,
and infirm as the sea.

...

              Severn IX

What do I know about life, except

She pulses in my pointless veins
and draws the fibres of my muscles tight
in fear and despair at the sight of herself

walking upright, and animated,
shrouded, and shimmering wet:

A being dipped in the crypt of the world?

...

Severn X

First the banks.

Then the supermarkets burst.
Open the road - we must run

Leaving everything.

From the super-fluidity of the heart
To the barren openness of the brain.

We must run, like the river


I am bleeding on. 


 Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.   


No comments:

Post a Comment