THE CAPTIVE, CALMED
THE CAPTIVE, CALMED
Here in the breeze and the blush
Of this sun strummed garden, I sit,
part resplendent
In nature, and to some extent, great
neglect.
The people who know of me will hold
one face clear
Before them, while choosing to be
unaware
Of the other for which only a handful
of names
Are suspects. And yet, we are all
crimes in one sense,
Remaining ignorant of each other. By
using these
Separations as custom, it would
appear that we’re hiding,
While shattered and stunned behind
glass,
Content not to know, or to even see
the full picture
That in particular I’ve been
painting, along with
This breath bred for sharing and the
kisses I’ve kept
Behind masks. But to those I love and
have loved,
I invoke these special spirits in
summer.
I share my work and my worries as you
flicker
And flash between leaves. You are in
my thoughts
Constantly as the worlds we knew arc
past orbits,
And this new Space Station, complete
with the shadows
Of home now competes
with any other glimpsed world
As I black hole away from perception,
passing through
My own supernova, as the stars I once
traced duly fold.
I feel as if I were travelling far
while never leaving this table.
If this is a week of depression with
another to come
I’ll take hold of the small audience
of the self as I do my
Level best to distract him,
attempting to warm myself
From the fires within which we’ll all
lose control.
At Fifty I creak and rise from my
seat and picture myself
Ten years later. Then ten years on.
Who will know me,
And will they have read what I wrote?
Perhaps I type it here
To disown the swell of fate sent to
claim me
And to then celebrate it, before
these words and burns
Turn to smoke. Few listen, I know.
But when they do,
There is sweetness and in such aroma,
and the slow
And tapering trail, lights bestowed.
Borrowed no doubt
From that sun that portraits each of
us in this shimmer
Summoning shapes we’ll ascend to and
volumes
Of voice far, suns know. If you were
to ask me right now,
I would say that nothing I write is
catharsis. Such expressions
Of loss, love and anger have no
resolutions as such.
Each returns. I simply write to reach
out, to touch
With a line, thought or gesture. I
write just to honour
The life that I now just research. As
I sit and consider
And try to work out a way to be
better, in a closed world
Windows open and in seeing the sky
eyes still learn.
It is a strange thought indeed when
home becomes
Its own prison and when the known
streets beyond it,
And the appeal they once had has
declined.
This is not because of a strain,
infamous germ,
Or contagion, but simply because of a
feeling
For which at the present time,
there’s no rhyme.
Life has lost former scope so
scampers now,
For potential. Across trees, parks
and gardens,
City and field, clouds are scraped.
The precious
Bird of faith swoops, while I sit and
remain,
Death’s calm captive, forming each
day
My new sentence. But as my lost loves
soar,
I escape.
David Erdos August 5th 2020
For more poems from David Erdos visit The Corona Diaries collection
David Erdos is an actor, writer, director with over 300 professional credits. He is a published poet, playwright, essayist and illustrator. He has lectured on all disciplines in theatre and film for leading performing arts colleges, schools and universities around the world. His books include EASY VERSES FOR DIFFICULT TIMES, THE SCAR ON THE CLOUD, OIL ON SILVER, NEWS FROM MARS, CHANGING PLACES WITH LIGHT (penniless press) and BYZANTIUM with the photographer Max Reeves. He is a contributing editor for The International Times and maker of documentaries all over the world. David’s work has been acclaimed by many leading figures including Harold Pinter, Heathcote Williams, Alan Moore, Andrew Kotting, Chris Petit and Iain Sinclair in whose recent book THE LAST LONDON, David features. He can be reached at David.erdos@sky.com.
David Erdos
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© David Erdos has asserted his moral rights as author of his work and has full copyright.
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