Wednesday, 10 May 2023

Five Poems by Massimo Fantuzzi

 



Full August

Lost and Found

 

a glister of

church bells

distils

itself

on the blistering hoods,

in polychrome

the rare cars

 

trivially, we call this Sunday

Un espresso e una grappa bianca, grazie.

 

somnolent tourists out there

swayed by their tram

miss a trick

that probably is not there anymore

to miss

 

(Passerini Caffé – leaned on the display of assorted mini pastries under Sonia’s puzzled eye, barmaid in gilet and red tie.)

 


Ash

 

There is a senselessness in the fire

when the same cheers up alive

the shadows swaying

underneath the trees asleep.

 

Pine cones crackle, shrubs twitch:

the cauldron summons this idea of comet

jumped off its swing to lend me its tail

of Sagittarius icy shards to be tempered in the fire.

 

There is a parallel world in my mind where most of my secret desires breed and feed – there, in that place which crosses from mind to physical reaction you live. D.

 

Friendly fragrances light on my face,

the loot of memories, the plunder of furtive

needs we stole from each other, ores

smelted

into arrowheads.

 

From your stony hall

of solitary tapestries, despot,

steel shut your doors, ready the pyre.

 

Your shivers echo through stairs and linens.

 

This fugitive is planning his return.

 


Witchery, a Pastorale

(Sardinia’s call will reach you when you least expect it.)

 

Bathed in dawn, tongues of ferns chirp out wandering

my shakes anew. A rush of fur on each one,

wide-open, each viola stroke

in all its blissed stammers, my shouting blasphemies.

Ghost, the pallid shoreline oscillates,

idle entrance of gazes, happy people

out scavenging for bling to devour.

Sullen rush. O Lord, to whom shall I repent?

Rusty nouns these relics, spirited penance

rent of a backyard, red of sofa,

their typical arched hurtling posture tinted side,

whistling nylon, fennel flavour in the wilderness.

Things to do together, naked torso by the terrace garden.

A: (Near the occupied bed centre stage) Hopeless, as has been said and written.

B: (Stands at the open window, stage right, luminous grey sky; looks down) Apparently, some are still protesting, wanting to know more.

A: Can’t hear a thing.

B: It wouldn’t be appropriate.

A: Who would even consider scolding as the countenance of freedom? Did he? Ever?

B: (Approaching the unconscious man on the bed) Not a chance, let me see.

A: That’s not why we are here.

B: Precisely what I meant.

A: Hallucinations; and free of charge. What a disappointment. Couldn’t he find better ways of spending his lunch hour?

B: One has to integrate… this… racket comes with a modest salary, you know?

A: Well, it certainly does not advertise the prospect of going around and squandering.

B: Foolish thing in the current climate.

A: Foolish things happen.

So what? My loot ripens

the innermost winter’s fixity of fields.

Beneath their dormant look

monophonic foundlings roam the room

sowing out care into caresses. Absence, wrap it now,

away with it,

the slow belly of a caravan taking lithely

in numberless a genesis

for this scant season. Like rocks

these icy potatoes will trundle very little mercy

(villagers left in floods).

 

 

Versuch, eine Statue zu schnitzen.

 

Barcarolle

 

I find myself asking, What must fill his head? Lots of words, lots of moving pictures and blushing shapes, lots and lots and lots of peaceful energy.

Everything that hopefully I can narrate to you.

I play my part too, just what that is now I am unsure of. What I convey to the different parts of my life I don’t get to know. R.

 

Bathed and dressed in dunes: a trail of primary threads draws over opaque skin camminando e camminando resounding spin of her porcelain galaxy. Ambulatory in their rippling whirlpool from the sieved sands compassionate singing of chambermaids – the woman marches to battle for light flickered on waves and waves of fettered irons. Prime numbers I come in search of, our exit’s up.

 

Let us cosset and brush like

like self-possessed nymphs

bent a blunder stalk

above our quilted pond: will this

palest ink

half-soaked, spooked already, 

tomorrow’s horrors spillage, be

somewhat reminiscence?

 

[Previous version appeared in Poetry Salzburg Review n.37]


 

Tender Afternoon on Cream Crocheted Wool

(Shortcuts were soon acknowledged to be a direful waste of time, inevitable for us boys.)

 

Passes the broad hour alike,

ploughs and breaks of cloistered land

leave lingering portrait, little swerve,

from pews and sermons,

glide ambitions on dusty provincial verb.

 

THE CYPRESSES

(In swaying arms and shrillest ends, quizzing our conniving souls.)

Please through.

Through our scented needles.

Trust; this way.

Please comrades.

 

So let’s, on cloud’s rests we lie

grandly dandled by

asphalt & cognition behind

left. To befriend the intermitting signal of a butterfly

one bicycle wheel wheels; adjoining trajectory, the pair

in all jittery resolve, pencil the skies,

gyres, their continuo decrescendo.

 

Our time unflawed and nimble resumes its paddling,

rustled uneven vacillates our vessel.

 

THE DINGHY

(In riven intentions, amidst a vegetation half parched whispered submerged.)

The barbed wire dwindles,

The paper-cut posits puncturing

Buried thoughts of pursuit

High and low behind bloodshot eyes

And beastlike stranded pride.

 

[Previous version appeared in The North n.68]



 

Massimo Fantuzzi is a British-Italian dual national born in Milan and living in Leicestershire. After his degree in Education since 2001, he works in supporting SEND individuals of all ages in schools and residential settings. Author of the collection of poems and prose poems Marcia Gioie (Alkalea, 1999) and member of the editorial board at Triggerfish Critical Review, his poems have appeared in Alba, Orbis, The North, Bombay Gin, BlazeVox, Poetry Salzburg Review, The Honest Ulsterman, Abridged, E·ratio, Berkeley Poetry Review, The Dalhousie Review, Grey Sparrow Journal, In Parentheses, Poetica Review, Quail Bell, Night Picnic Press, Danse Macabre, Menacing Hedge, and elsewhere. Recently, his work has been included in the anthology edited by Ettore Fobo, Fiori del Caos (Kipple, 2023). From his window on the National Forest, he keeps track of the continuing proceedings among the treetops, low clouds and other liminal frontiers. Twitter @MassimoFantuzzi

 


No comments:

Post a Comment

Five Poems by Ken Holland

    An Old Wives’ Tale     I’ve heard it said that hearsay   i sn’t admissible in trying to justify one’s life.     But my mother always sai...