WIND WRITING
WIND WRITING
I feel a close communion now with all
of those
Who have left me: heroes like
Heathcote, and Harold,
Or, my poor parents, ensconced as
they are in their heat,
Borne from the steadying sunburst of
stars while I sit
Stricken in part by this weather,
glaring through sun
Which condemns me, only to then frown
and freeze me,
Making even a fragmented day
incomplete. Woman
And man ape themselves at the current
time between
Measures. At one point, paths to
freedom, and then
A fast return to the cage, with the
desire to be what
We were before making Hamlets of both
towns
And people, as if, soon obstructed, a
future unwound
Incurs rage. Pace and point aren’t
replete, as experience
Falls, deleted. In pushing the pen
through this poem,
I am raking, or so it feels,
disturbed earth. There is
A heaviness in my hand, not from the
lack or need
Of invention, but rather to do with
who listens,
Or reads it, and when. Where’s the
worth?
Perhaps it is yet to be found, and
that is what
These words witness. As we endure
empty hours
We fill and busy ourselves through
the fray
Of invented purpose and proof of our
own imprint
On the planet. As if each of us were
a poem, a novel
Of notes, a short play. Seeking to
rewrite our known
End with a successful sense of
becoming, and making
Ourselves our own Summer in this
climate of change
Set to storm. So, we weather the way
as the day breathes
Despite us and the deaths fate
delivered in memory
At least keep all warm. I write these
words from the wind
And for the wind too, if I’m honest.
As it eases itself
Between houses let it write its own
way and restore
Not only the movements you made but
those you will
Go on to make in new structures, in
which walls become
Windows for the landscapes within
broken doors.
The real has been sealed. But now we
open the letter.
In reading this you’ll find wanting.
And in writing
Yourself you’ll want more.
David Erdos August 2nd 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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