Cetacean
A whale, his spiralling
tail whacks waves
to white spritz;
slowly he moves and feeds;
plangent down he weaves,
comes up like a gentle reef;
water breaks around
before behind
his glorious weight;
his eyes yard upon yard apart
across his bulk turn and look,
his enormous flippers folding,
opening, abaft his massive head.
Majestic mammal,
fish you will never be.
Like some overgrown living fuselage
of flesh
you move your ponderous blood-warm
body
through lonely seas;
tropics to the pole
the ghastly cold,
the fostering warmth
make no difference to you.
Your blood, our blood circles,
loops endlessly;
you're with us in this; your heart
pumping heat and life
against the immortal unforgiving
sea.
Waving slow and steady,
your great flukes send you below;
the waters part, down you drive,
shining, disappearing
in the safety of
the dark and bitter sea;
for you the better home,
the deep made bright
by your gentle presence.
Dream
By the blue Bakelite clock
on the wall
midnight posted.
I wait for Dream,
my pale horse,
to come carry me off,
his broad back where I ride,
has a white saddle
hard and smooth
as Athena's hand.
Horse, we shall fly tonight
to realms beyond
the shells of dead worlds,
beyond the pea-green seas
of pink-eared mermaids,
past trees and spines
on which birds may be spiked
or an isotope of helium
caught and held;
past strange fruit
like small luscious balloons,
amber and gold bladders,
inflating at dusk, drifting aloft,
spar-high, then higher,
seeming bound
for the starry heavens.
Horse, I wait for you in bed
with my hands on the reins,
for yesterday venturing into
the rain looking for you
and you came breathing snorting
cold blue fire,
your mane awned and stiff
as the shoots of an iron vine.
Dream, I touched your forehead,
traced with purple veins
and you wandered off,
your shiny hide
steaming like a pond
on a cool autumn morning.
Even if I got on you, Dream,
got my chance,
I know you would throw me off,
throw me off like offal,
like one not meant to ride,
one whose destiny was decided
and like that king of Babylon
weighed and found wanting;
one whose time to ride,
to abide in the pastures
of the fortunate and the blessed
had come and gone.
Guernica at the Prado
For a year or more
I looked and looked at it,
in my soul,
lived under the spell
of Picasso's baleful
grey and black fandango
of a bombed town,
a farrago of agonies
of bull and horse,
parts of people
caught and displayed
in sharp outline;
then it became too fine,
too perfect in its kind,
too much to take
and I had to turn away,
turn my mind and eye,
try to isolate and
banish the pieces,
try to burn away the vision
of that monstrous canvas,
bury a pretence, a practice,
a sacrifice of time;
none of it worked.
Never forgotten,
that huge ghastly swipe
of paint haunts me still,
hurts me and will
until the end of its world,
ending as it did,
and the end of mine.
Out In the Country
All my fantasies
have fled the old homestead;
the hacienda’s as empty of heat
as winter’s candles.
Still as a painting
the moon hangs
in the snoring night;
twice-pale she looks,
Diana
surprised by the hunter.
Hounds skate down moonbeams
like avenging furies;
the stag, a shadow, a ghost,
runs over the meadows.
Running far from my native shores
I let the wonderful cooler native women
play with me, titillate me, adulate me,
until my weary head
rests at last
on the anvil.
At night,
satiate and subdued,
I walk on the beach,
lonely stars above
the encompassing sea.
Lonely, I look at the night;
to my fallible mirror of self
Prince Hamlet or Nial
at the least,
stalking, brooding on the strand;
to rutting teens,
more like an apparition,
an old fool
doddering in the moonlight.
Well, even Athens looked
like a heap of stone
to a seagull flying
high
as Hitler’s arm once was;
we souls below
swoop close,
try to embrace
in tortures measured
to the goose-stepping firmament.
Saint Lawrence,
well done over the coals,
put up a reckless good front
besieged;
passus est or assus est,
died or fried,
it was over;
this fire, his life,
burnt out.
For us a lesson;
a thousand enemies gnaw at
brains and bones alike,
defy them all,
at the crack of doom defy;
it’s soon enough
the stinting grass
grows over our heads.
Give
and Forget
Are there more starving
than the stars?
At night
the sick child’s heart
runs down
like a clock unwound;
in the morn
Aurora weeps
on a crooked elbow.
More starving
it seems
more empty bellies
than the teeming
galaxies of space,
than the waves in the sea;
infinity hardly holds them.
Our foolish hearts melt
like ice
in the sunlight
before pictures of sticks
and stones,
travails
with an ex-wife,
the dead puppy.
But there, in
the wastelands of
Afric and Ind,
Rio and Lisbon,
where the Tagus,
good as gold,
is a fancy name
for nothing;
there, in odds and ends,
in nooks and crannies,
in darkness,
they go on starving.
Jack D.
Harvey’s poetry has appeared in Scrivener, The Comstock Review, Valparaiso
Poetry Review, Typishly Literary Magazine, The Antioch Review, The Piedmont
Poetry Journal and elsewhere. The author has been a Pushcart nominee and
over the years has been published in a few anthologies.
The author has been writing poetry since he was sixteen and lives in a small town near Albany, New York. He is retired from doing whatever he was doing before he retired.
Cetacean first appeared in Ramingo's Porch, Guernica in Scarlet Leaf Review (magazine may be kaput), Dream in Duanes Poetree (magazine kaput), Out in the Country in Indiana Voice (believe this magazine is kaput); Give and Forget in The Prairie Light Review.
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