Aerial Views
With a name that matches his appearance,
he can handle a
radio wave, if you let him.
He speaks VHF,
it’s old but its 405 lines
could bend a
message around any corner
in a Welsh Valley
or a Scottish Highland.
He came here when
this chimney smoked
and tiny
televisions wore outsized cabinets.
H,
do you hear me?
I know that he does,
the dual standard
receiver saw to that.
Bolt solid, his
expression never changes
while I turn on
the whims of the wind.
My UHF tongue
stretches to lines of 625
and we worked
together from 1964 –
that v-shaped lad
downstairs was speechless.
In 1952 “H” meant
“historical first” as in
national wireless
television transmission,
replacing earlier
efforts with fewer lines.
When I joined him
life was black and white
but I was able to
colour it in from 1967.
After that
television sets moved in everywhere
and “H” and I
watched it all from here.
“H” speaks with
reverence of a Scotsman,
a brilliant
inventor and pioneering engineer
who created not
only television back in 1925
but many other
technologies enjoyed today.
I think the
inventor’s name was Yogi Bear.
Sadly, VHF’s
transmissions ended in 1985
with the irony of
its last days being in Scotland.
Progress has left
us here on this roof
and learned more
sophisticated languages
like cable,
satellite, digital and broadband,
though UHF is
still spoken in digital circles,
albeit with a much
better accent.
“H” is crackling
at me: Stooky, you idiot,
it
wasn’t Yogi Bear, it was John Logie Baird!
It’s My Turn to Learn
I’m travelling
round and round and up and down
hear the
organ piping
carousel
is turning
The horse will run
its course no matter what
cast
upon a circuit
I don’t
have to like it
I’m looking at the
faces passing by
haven’t
I just met you?
I’d like
to forget you
I want to get away
from voiceful hurts
characters
that scratch me
others
try to catch me
The faces change
the conflicts stay the same
purse of
gathered memories
just
avoid the enemies
The anger and
resentment make no sense
different
faces same look
digging
with a sharp hook
The ups and downs
of life bring joy and tears
lessons
on a life ride
but I’m
crying inside
And when you think
you’ve finally worked it out
then the
ride is over
and your
life is over....
Trailing Links
My chain has been
severed from security and I am condemned.
We were bound
together but she joined another.
I walk links
trailing into the sunlight, no shadow of responsibility,
my bones
splintering under freedom’s burden.
I confess my sins
of loyalty and dedication and offer up my trinket,
pleading the present’s
mercy upon my lonely soul.
Mira Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
Mira doesn’t live
here anymore.
I did send you a
written notification, didn’t you receive it?
Oh I see, it must
have got lost. Never mind.
Mira doesn’t live
here anymore.
Yes she passed
away in the hospice.
You wouldn’t have
seen her much that year.
She couldn’t go
out at all.
She’s fine now, no
more suffering.
Mira doesn’t live
here anymore.
She moved out
unofficially in October
but she used to
pop back from time to time, which was nice.
She moved up to
Heaven just over a year later.
Sorry but I don’t
have the telephone number.
I wish I did. I’d
love to speak to her again.
Susan Wilson
lives in East London and began writing poetry following the death of her mother
in 2017. Her poems have been published by Lucy Writers, Snakeskin,
Runcible Spoon, Dreich, Areopagus, Streetcake, Rue
Scribe, Amethyst Review and Lothlorien. Prior to the pandemic
she was a regular performer at “Spineless Authors”,
a local open mic event. Her debut chapbook is “I Couldn’t Write to Save Her
Life” (Dreich, 2021).
Thank you for these thought provoking and lustrous works -- so original and powerful.
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