Untitled
This was the summer of new hopes, new seeds,
new growth: a search for a new life – so this
is how it feels to finally live at
the end of the world.
I refuse to
be
barren of joy which you try to take from
me within this quiet sense of social
dislocation.
I
said to her: ‘I don’t
want your charity, I just want your love.’
Can I do this job these days after the
freedom I have tasted on her lips?
This is nothing other than a middle-age
ruin: the immediate sense of the
present.
This is
the case: if this works, it
works, if this is all there is then I shall
die – it sometimes feels like I live under
a different sun.
What happens if I’m
submissive to what you want?
I am not
ironic, but have become irony
itself: he was an amorphous mess of
stewing contradictions – the curtains are
closed on this winter day and the lights are
off.
I have to work
everyday just to
cut through the noise, having become death
haunted.
This was meant to be freedom, a
new adventure; a new sound; a new me;
a new improvisation: all of this
is just a different kind of melancholy,
boredom.
Here’s
to all the glittered showered
stripper poets on New Year’s Eve: I come
looking for some new kind of euphoria!
The holidays are over, all
the mince
pies and clotted cream have been
consumed.
These
days he only ever went
to bed early, without seeing anyone
in the day, meaning sometimes you are
neither poor enough or rich enough – yet
you fall through the spaces.
Maybe
I’m
already dead and died years ago, and
all that walks now is nothing but a cipher,
an echo and ghost of what once existed.
I’m not feeling
rather now! I feel like
I want tomorrow, but I wanted it
yesterday – is this form of asceticism
a form of flagellant decadence?
Everything will be alright!
The
crescent
sickle morning moon sits in the grey sky
like lovers lying in warm beds on cold
December mornings: sometimes it is better
to write some lines than let nothing fall
from the day.
The slowness and the emptiness
of these days begin to grind gears with
entropy, as I live this ghost infested
life, with these four walls which try to crush
everything from the hollow case of my
crown – and now I’m drunk on life, even though
today I am alone.
He listens to
Nico’s ‘Chelsea Girls’ far too much – this city
will bleed me another, another
chance, or I shall bleed from the inside,
as I stand before the gates of a new
dawn, with Copper Clarke silhouetted in
the distance.
I
have the urge to get blind
stinking drunk, lush, and decedent – I just
want to misbehave - a ragtag band of
malcontents unable to do a job
properly, but wanting golden stars, but
all they got was this dead sea salted
albatross.
I am reborn, but what as
I am unsure – this July, at least, he
rose every morning with still a slight hope
in his heart, the weakness of the ghost within
the machine.
Maybe,
I’m choosing a new
matrix of ideas and have yet to set
them down: we aim for the universal
and all we get are square limited boxes.
Once again, as I’ve recited many
times before: I refute entropy, and
the dawn shall banish the stars and this night.
This year I intend to be the exorcist
for these several demons: today I have
fallen into the lion’s den, as I
sit here drinking green tea on a grey
December afternoon ten days before
Xmas.
The light
flashes in the living
room.
God, I miss
good conversations
over bottles of red wine – at last I
can look outwards towards another world.
This
becomes wider than the lion’s den,
only the rhythm of my heart will remain,
emptied into the ether.
He begins
to watch film again!
This is a new section
of this Venn Diagram, I bring rose and
firewater, while I keep getting this
feeling that it’s only 10.01am
in the morning, then you reach a point where
existence becomes so surreal to be
believed, having discovered a sound world of
exquisite banalness, running continually
through my ears.
This new revolution begins
these forms of old words and long walks.
There is one piece of a sum I need to
pull apart: I hear tonight distant echoes
of past rock’n’roll like a younger soul
is trapped within my skin – there is something
about this place and the other (place.)
You could say I’m
already growling
for next year: an algorithm change’s
the tempos of life, hapax legomenon,
the unknown, lost translation, unknown,
unremembered.
Marianne Faithfull
stated: “‘… [He was] … already ripe for
the picking? He was ready for absolutely
anything! He was ripe. Just like I was
ripe, and just like you yourself were ripe for
the whole experience. It’s just like what
happens when an apple gets too ripe to
hang on a tree. who knows how far it’s
going to fall.’”
This will now be my
solitude – this room – these ideas – so I
listen to the music I listened to
when I was sixteen, and everybody
was still alive, with the exception of
the poets.
The
mould encrusted stilton,
washed down with port, slides down my gizzard:
I think I need imagery and new symbols?
Colombine can eat me, making Pierrot
jealous – although Xmas is only once
again two weeks away, time feels elastic
and jumbled as the masks we have to wear
over our faces and chins muffling
our voices.
I
read books of dead young poets
whose styles never had the chance to mature,
still stuck in their young confused nihilistic
mode – we’re going to dance this crazy joy around.
…And then nothing happened…
how
did this
romantism become so baroque?
The metaphysical calligraphic
theological meridian
inscription on the walls and ceilings of
the temples of the mind: I want to plunge
a steak through my heart even if it is
medium rare.
It is on November
days like this when you begin to think that
it’s all over, finishing as grey as
a winter sky: I have enough faith to
begin dancing again.
Once he
wanted
joy, now he has to settle for this ostracism –
everyone left home, at last I am free.
This is where my skin peels apart and my
breath becomes, Nubya Garcia sends
a shudder down my spine, as Nico
whispers in my ears – make tea, put a CD
on.
Remember
silence and be thankful
for it, for these are the empty days,
therefore, I shall fill them with these words.
The aesthete hammers upon a new anvil:
I have never lost a game of rock, paper,
scissors – the world is performed, austere like,
as I sit here listening to the music
of someone else’s life of the soul.
They are still telling me I have to leave
through the walls: so much for my prognosis –
he could never obtain the silence he
once had, all was spoken noise. Is this the
point where I begin to feel again?
The
ribbons rot, but there will always be this
noise – this was meant to be freedom and life.
Nick Ingram is an Artist/Poet/Writer/Performer who operates out of Plymouth, England. His work is rooted in the ideas of montage, collage, cut-up, and language. He has a consistent record of publishing both locally and internationally (poetry/prose/columns/essay) in various media and working in the arts over the past ten years. His recent short story ‘Research Towards an Understanding of the Performance Artist and Film Maker Emily X,’ appears in The Opiate, Fall, 2021, Vol 27 (Paris.) As well as this he has published poetry in various media outlets for the best part of a decade. On top of this he has published two volumes of his work ‘Dionysius Williams & Other Southwest Observations (2014),’ and, ‘Some Notes from a Small Dent of an English City (2016.)’ Nick has a great belief in grass roots arts and believes that the idea of place is a great motivator to creating and anchoring grounded work, whether that is either in writing or image making. It was because of this he became a founding member and director of Plymouth’s spoken word and performance collective ‘WonderZoo.’ His artistic practice also extends to image making in various media and has been involved recently with local Plymouth art collective: ‘Plymouth Artists Together.’ This Curriculum Vitae contains examples from his image output over the last ten years, as well as a full publishing history of all his published work and activity over the same period. He is looking forward to developing new projects over the coming year.
Wooow!!!
ReplyDeleteMarvelous poetry, Nick. Love to read more!!