Thursday 20 May 2021

Five Fabulous Poems by Bob Beagrie

 



One Day, I’ll Ask You Kindly 

 

To dress me in a coat of patchworked fish skin,

A feather headdress of seagull, goose, duck, swan.

 

Bestow upon me the name of Elfking Underwater

Lead me to the barrow mound in Mulgrave Woods

 

Its slopes a strewn alter of withered bones,

A shrine of skulls: from the little head-pans

 

Of mice, weasels, crows, and owls

To swine, stag, horse, bear, wolf and man,

 

Then let me light the tinder of my own pyre

That will flare so bright it’ll shame the rising sun.

 

 

Whorlton Castle

 

No spring or well

at the ruins of Whorlton castle

grass hides their source


Medieval femme fatale

Lucia de Thweng was here

learning how to tread

 

De Brus ownership

of a conquered wapentake

priced in Domesday

 

Husbands and lovers

abusers, chivalrous knights,

eyes upon the land:

 

The hillsides and moors,

the gentle rolling meadows,

the pigs, cows and serfs,

 

The blasted stonework

of the outbuilding's remains;

fields of grazing sheep

 

 

The Day the Sun Wore My Skull

 

Each day the sun wears a different shell

To sideways scramble its migratory path

Across the sky, mercurial in mood swings,

Today's it found before dawn, in my bed,

A skull of jumbled dreams to be plucked

From the vertebrae stem, scooped clean

To make it habitable, a nomadic shelter

To house the spirit, to contain the light

Like a lamp, crucible to transport flames;

Headless, I move through vacant hours

Vaguely distraught by the loss of thought,

Eased by reliance on muscle memories

All the well-learned routines and rituals,

And set instructions on what to believe.

 

 

Expulsion

 

“So He drove out the man and stationed cherubim on the east side of the Garden of Eden,

along with a whirling sword of flame to guard the way to the tree of life.”

 

Genesis 3:24

 

Leaving the forest for the animals

with their interbred adaptations,

their tokens of simplified savagery

and their disdain for our soft, furless

scaleless bodies, we took our hornlessness

and our lack of wings and buried them

in a sack of words we could never speak.

 

Do you even remember that first Golgotha?

 

What I remember is the rain soaking my dreads,

the taste of the soil and the Sky Spirit’s song

burning like fever-veins of molten iron

through the squamous, columnar, cuboida.

 

You sketched my shape on the cave wall

I wove a wave of ochre handprints.

 

In this new life it’s only in the flicker of firelight

that we dance naked with the ancestors

regaining shadow shells, beaks and antlers.

 

 

Evensong



Gibbous moon latched by a dream catcher

Crooning the blues over snow swaddled hills

Where towns and villages break like waves

In the curtain twitch of isolating suburbs;

The holy watchfulness of the little egret

Perched upon a bare branch over the gill

With the patience of a slaver’s statue

Its own pale smudge snagged amid debris

Going nowhere fast in the cold lunar flood

The yearly catastrophes of freeze and melt

Clogged drains gargling fresh darknesses

The waters glow with living room lamps,

She sails twilight in her threadbare shawl

The ancient parade of the not-yet-born

Between day’s demise and hatchling night

The sky is like the wide-open sea, gone quiet

Lulled at last from turbulence, laid out

Across the thickening mirk, a dropping away,

As she dips her slippered feet into skull cups

Of sleep, skips over white moors to Swainby.

 

Bob Beagrie has published numerous collections of poetry, most recently And Then We Saw The Daughter of the Minotaur (The Black Light Engine Press 2020), Civil Insolencies (Smokestack 2019),  Remnants written with Jane Burn (Knives, Forks & Spoons Press (2019), This Game of Strangers – written with Jane Burn (Wyrd Harvest Press 2017),  Leasungspell (Smokestack 2016). His next collection When We Wake We Think We’re Whalers from Eden is due out from Stairwell Books in 2021. He lives in Middlesbrough and is a senior lecturer in creative writing at Teesside University.




 

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