Saturday 5 October 2019

Cars


A red truck climbs a bend in the distant road


A man in a yellow vest unloads bubble wrap bulk from a white van in the car park


Closer, a small blue saloon stands still in a disabled bay


A grey-haired man at the wheel


I think he’s reading

Standing cars don’t wobble or emit exhaust fumes anymore


Out of earshot you can’t tell whether engines are running

Swallows dive

A woman in a long coat with orange shoulder patches, her hair combed down and parted in the middle, walks toward the ATM


A young black man carries milk under his arm


An old man in a windcheater, flat cap and brown slacks makes slowly and with purpose toward the store, dwarfed by the industrial size of modern things


The martial architecture

More cars arrive


A fast blue one high on its haunches 


One of no definite colour, just reflecting leaves and sky, with ladders on the roof not sun

Ah! Now I see exhaust fumes and a rattling chassis. A black fiat. An open door. The driver out and up front, scraping the screen for ice 


How the winter falls fast up north


In politics, they sacked the minister for seasons. Cut backs.
Autumn got cancelled. Or from the looks of it, frozen 


No longer tracking the base interest rate 


Autumn, like blue collar salaries, out in the cold 

I sit close up against the mighty pane 


Lit-window exposure. Alone with everything 


Two blokes on the back bench and Florie poised behind the counter


Coffee in the urn


Neat squares of silence beat sequentially


Vast empty spaces


Cavernous retail minimalism


We are window dressing


Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks 


Not quite in the day 


Perched on a threshold


Both connected to and severed from the world by the same old see-through walls


Prison guard disguised as a friend from home


Never quite in the game


Performing not being


Like cars

...

Monday 17 June 2019

Dingle Bay


The relationship had been over a while but we had not broken up.


We were still together.


Alone together.


He’d call and I’d pick up.


Inside I was broken up.



Eventually I made the break.


It was a bell-clean see-for-miles expanse of summer weekend morning that picked me up and swept me across miles of peninsula - on the motorbike - riding out from Limerick passed contractors and tractors and through mountain passes where cloud shadows scurried across loud land masses - dancing with me - escorting me down onto the long yellow beaches of Strand that led west out to Dingle.


That bevelled corner of Ireland pulling me to her like magnets on a pin cushion.


I checked in and unpacked. My room had a long balcony floored with dark planks of treated wood and a glass rail affording views of New World potential even as I lay in bed. Yellow and blue and white bars. Sand sea sky. And the pillow in my eye.


Three thousand one hundred miles in a south westerly swipe gives me Liberty, looking right back at me all promissory and statuesque. Extending her arms out to these coves and farms.


Straight across for Nova Scotia. New Scotland. A reactionary relic of the Highland Clearances.


Celtic shadows.


And I very nearly missed her.


She grew from a dot to a walking woman. Beaming. Coming straight at me. All purposeful and blurry as the sea spray sheen and taking over my bell-clean see-for-miles vista.


Giving me the big thirty-twos. Out-shining even the Eastern fires of a new day. And me at a happy loss. My mouth curled at the smile in her eyes.


Later I ran at pace out across the bay and up two hills. Cresting, I arrived into a sandcastle breeze at the old town where buildings came out of a cold stone quarry that still glistened like the ink wet signature of founding fathers.


Gulls kept darting.


A town of iron oxide red and violet manganese. A mineral town dolled up blue and yellow and pink and green in the Irish way. Childhood story houses. Gift-wrapped in band board, corners and frieze that flutter on the ocean breeze.


With shrines in every window, even the bank. And nothing open on the Sabbath but the towering basilica. Its Roman magnificence shimmered and settled in loco parentis.


An Atlantic psyche washed over me.


I’d gotten away.



And when I went home I never went back. Just forward through a sequence of nows. He’d call but I was always newly engaged and all the more fortified for it. Nestled in the silky steel resolve of closure.


Everything rounded in its rightful frame of reference like the holiday postcard that falls out of the mail, seven days old and machine frank-stamped in the corner with the six digits of that red letter day.


Wish you were here.


From Dingle Bay.


..


gK

Sunday 2 June 2019

An English monsoon


It’s Sunday afternoon in the middle of summer. It’s raining and the sky is silvery white.


I’m in the rocking chair with a paperback American classic. Over at my desk the computer is streaming some New York saxophone street jazz. I can’t quite place it. Heat has. 

It’s great background music to read against. I think of a big park with a small lake I found north of fifty-seventh on the east side. The first time I got brave enough to walk blocks of blocks without looking back.


Eight hundred and two pages. It’s a classic by an American master.


The rain isn’t really rain. Every ten seconds or so a dry pitter patter beat of what will turn out to be water hits my windows. Carried on the wind. Down below me on the streets the precipitation will be imperceptible. 

The noise will outshout it. Fresh blustery gushes. The sights will outpaint it in strokes from sharp brushes.


Up here though, even with the windows closed I have come to know these things concerning the potential illusion of my daily perception.


Mundanity aside, I think it’s important to know because it teaches me something beyond itself.


I rock out of the rocking chair on its next forward roll and go to my bedroom to lay a while on my bed. On top of the make. Light streaming in from behind my head. The light up here is fierce on silvery white sky days. Like looking into the sun. I don’t look out of the windows. I either draw the blinds or I sit close up to the windows and get the light working for me. Over my shoulder.


There are two kinds of writer. The one who gets all the natural daylight available and positions it behind her, so her eyes and it are both travelling in the same direction. At the same time, the object of her art - her canvas confection - shines like angels in the Sistene chapel.


Pontelli knew how to work with light.


And this kind of writer. She wrings every last ounce of light out of even the poorest excuse of a dull afternoon through a tiresome and weatherworn English monsoon. She gathers it all together like a child gathering marbles. She rinses and pulls and works that light into some compunction of rays and balls and she gets right on up close in front of it and she says “Now go. Now get to work" and even as she says this you know she's not talking to herself. That she is instructing the gathered-up energy.


And there’s the other kind.


I make food but don’t eat it. Wholesome relationships with food come chiefly out of one’s time assembling it. Learning it. And the kitchen is the best room in the flat right now because the window faces north and emptied of glare the view is the real dish on the menu. Big green skies tumble across Lancashire, breaking into a neat rolling column of blue distant mountains. The Pennines. Rolling like coasters. Almost half the glass is a foreground masterpiece. Constable. Hockney. Turner. Miles of green meadow. Light and deep. Pronounced. The light working for those miles like it works for Michelangelo's angels on Pontelli’s domes and like how it works for the notepad of the writer who gathered all her light up into a ball before she began. That’s what separates Little Hulton church spires from the Singing Tree on the moors above Burnley. That’s what lies between any foreground and background.


Not distance.


Just light. Just different shades of light.


Keeping my eye on Winter Hill and the heights of Darwen I walk slowly and purposely through the flat left-to-righting each window and if I keep my eye on the easiest of eyelines: that Pennine tip against the big green sky, I can follow the range continuously across Accrington and Bolton and Eden and Bamford and Rossendale and each wind farm rotor helps me go running wildly over country miles of barren escarpment. The colour changing fast by the order of the organising cloud formations out of sight, above me.


Silhouetted un-identifiables thirty-five miles out. Farm outbuildings. Follies. Water towers. Edwardian gentry houses. Bluffs of rock.


The lough and the mountains and ruins and rain and purple-blue distances bound your demesne


If nothing else, Betjeman has taught me a new word and even how to pronounce it.


East and east and further east the mountain climbs into a dark question. Leeds. It quickly dips and restores. Snake Pass out to Sheffield. The Moorhead pass. And south now toward the Chatsworth Estate. Denton and Hyde sunk into the late foreground. Submitting to the high country behind them.


And then nothing. The mountain collapses into the Cheshire plains and the land sails off harmonious and all. Manchester airport. Joddrell Bank.


Her husband works at Joddrell Bank. He’s home late in the mornings.


I like walking slowly and purposely around the flat with the view as my companion.


Every single time it’s a completely different experience. I learn something unexpected. I see something new. I see me new.


Do you ever feel that the entire world is really quite small and that you could do anything? Give me six months and I could easily be anyone and do absolutely anything I choose.


I watch a Netflix show and the trailer is showcasing the lead actors downtown Manhattan apartment. For $2 million it looks quite small. A nice little rooftop outside bit, I suppose.


Then I think of it aside of the money. Because the money is nothing. And then I see it anew and it looks quite friendly and quite a warm, happy place to rest your head and write your thoughts out and snuggle up and stretch out big.


Yeah that would be fun for a while.


And I know instantly, deep within my bones that I could write a script that drops and either eat or become the money because that's what they do isn't it and looking out of my windows at the distant curvature of the earth I close my eyes and easily get a sense of NYC just an eighth planetary spin out beyond the Singing Tree. This guy is something to look at. So am I. And you. And all of us.

And anyway what is that? Does anyone really care about that? Surely the money and the body is background noise. Just babble.

All these people accumulating and going deeper into self and ego and accumulating and going deeper still. Nothings ever enough like a whirlpool of need. Insulated in the grabbiness greed of need. But don't tell it! With enough lawyers and smart PR and a hungry compliant global fanbase we can coolify and sell it.


And the psychological distance between what my computer, when it mimics television, is trying to suggest lies between me and the Manhattan jetset ….I want to say it has gone. That it has been obliterated.


But the thing is ...it was never there at all when I woke up this morning and it hasn’t been there since.


I sat through Mass like it was going on around me.


I think they call this vision. You know when you see all this… and the world is small and friendly and all its doors are open to you. And nobody anywhere on earth is that far removed from you or me for that matter as I sit here and type this right now.


The echo of the soft paw thud of the very last key I depress sifting, squeaking, leaking out into the big green world in a snare drum cackled-clatter you’d be pleased to even catch. Come day or night.


And the sky is silvery white.

Wednesday 13 March 2019

Sacred Cycles


Can I speak to something in you?
Can I implicate the March wind rippling across the mill pond
Or the howling tides of rain that criss-cross in sheets as I go about my day
Down lanes of leaves
The gales of rain
The silken sheets

Dare I dream of commanding the weather for such an audacious out-of-time endeavour
Of amassing the sensory stack of its multitude of energies and requesting that when they reach you, you direct them inward
That you might intuit a lesson all language failed ever to teach?
A dialogue that never yet left our timid articulate tongues
We stand in bodies that breathe the seasons of earth like a fragile China vase
Leaning into one another
On the mercy of one another
The glory of old grace
But like dancers lost in music don’t tell me we don’t know
We are more completely ourselves when we let go

Our relentless quest for control delivers waxwork illusions of superman chic
Up higher than the House of Atrius our pride towers
Wedded to ego
The only animal species whose powers harry and hound the sacred cycles
Of majesty that brought us here
That delivered us
Tender as the midlife midwife delivers to thrusts and shivers the new-born child
The lamb of her seasonal, wild expanse
What chance
That we are here at all!
Looking out at the world for some prize
The glistening trove
That goal!
Being it while seeking it from without
How could we know that where to end is where to begin is within?

By knowing that the seasons of our own flaking, healing, wrinkling, bleeding, breathing skin
Are the same seasons we see in the skies of winter, autumn, summer and spring?

Among us, deep in our midst and mildly mocking
Like a Cold War novel with a cheap spy twist is a mole
Insidious antagonist
Spouse with all the nous
Tucked up tight in bed. Your bed.
Like lions in a den
Think on it
To whom is the ego wed?

That bottomless hole - the quest for control doth smash to smithereens
Without rhyme or reason
The delicate rhythm of season
Doth mash our withered dreams in time and treason

We are corrupted
She is interrupted
She is gone
Porcelain vase in pieces
I hold my nose, put my head down and run
To the hills for my life
For I can’t stand the stench of the faeces emanating from
The slag heaps of our progressive output
Forged in the steely heat of our fear and with greed as our knife what have we done?
And we call it growth
What are we doing?

Chill out, Gary, it’s just fine art
The Waste Land. My Bed. The Road To Wigan Pier.
Eliot. Emin. Orwell
Ah, well
Chin up, eyes down, crack on
Nowt to see here

gK

...

Spin Rhetorica; or Grin: or If I Were Called In

  If I were called in to construct a belief system, I should make use of birds A codified catalogue of values and full-grown whole known lur...

The House of Words

The House of Words
built like a novel

She Travels Through Books

She Travels Through Books
the green light girl