To Declare
I need a chariot with a pair of wings
which won’t be mistaken for nuclear fins,
a name,
an address,
which will impress
the police and customs at Heathrow’s check-ins.
I declare an independent mind
but lacerated with grief,
a worn-out body
seeking relief,
some hard-won savings
but not in sterling
which would take me as far as Grasmere
or Stirling.
To Cross or To Cross
You stroll on lawns matted with flowers.
We tiptoe our way with half-closed eyes.
What acrobatic feats could elude timed fire,
waiting to burst from maiming mines!
To cross or to cross,
no not to bar us
from the traps of death
that lurk underground.
Some say a prayer.
Some curse the hour
that decrees the fate of blighted men.
And Diana reprobating such techno-power
that instantaneously severs legs and limbs
could not defuse the flames and horrors
which would erupt from lunatics’ toys.
News Headlines
Another peace accord
has brought discord.
Clamors for war
reverberate through the globe.
Human rights issues
as frail as tissue:
oceans will seethe
with refugees.
Religious error
is yoked to terror.
Commercial wedlock
inducing deadlock.
Straggling economies
conceiving poverty.
Desertification
with certification.
Ambassadors of mettle
unable to settle
where their presence can heal
political disease.
[Dedicated to Dr. Janet Gardiner, former Ambassador to Syria]
Nereid
She roams the water in search of her beloved
whom Polyphemus had banished, incensed by lust
that covets frailty in a blooming sea-flower,
whose lack of deference would make her sob.
Timorous fish swim through her tresses,
inhaling the brine of entangled weeds,
sorrowfully making many random conjectures
at possible causes for lachrymal trails.
A translucent string of hyacinthine bubbles,
profusely flowing from saddened eyes,
foreboding havoc and vindictiveness,
inscribing in water defiant love.
An Onomatopoeic Stance
A patter.
Is it feet that chatter
over things that matter?
A splutter.
Is it drops that gutter
from eyes that sputter?
A clatter.
Is it hooves that shatter
the former and the latter?
Reticence
The rose that froze at the tip of your tongue
had chosen to repose frost-bitten and numb,
deflecting a flight into the unseen,
inducing an untimely winter scene.
Its pollen lay deep writhing in sobs,
longing for a birth, for dreamt-of buds.
Each curling petal had gone to sleep
suppressing the scent I yearned to keep.