Saturday, 9 November 2024

Four Poems by Tom Holmes

 




Moral Black Panic

  

Dread lingers into every moment 

from now until the expected awfulness. 

For some, that's a whole lifetime. 

 

I. The End of Famine and the Day of Swollen Bellies 

 

The emaciated figure, that rose 

from grassy fields and shrivelled  

our bellies, was pierced and hung.  

It coughed as its neck crackled.  

 

Roots grow now deep, wheat is tall,  

cows graze, and sheep bah.  

We outlived its great famine,  

yet you cough sauce phlegm  

 

like our blackened rat turning,  

over flame, roasting, gasping. 

On your neck. A black boil. 

I am concerned you touched it. 

 

II. The Town Crier 

 

Towns and cities are overcome 

with shadowy outsiders entering  

behind the ocean’s raw wind. 

Check your skin. Check your kin. 

 

III. The Holkham Bible Readings 

 

Scientists insist death arrives 

from black rats that sailed the seas. 

But don’t you believe them. 

 

Just believe what you see  

with your eyes. Them outsiders 

you see turning corners, 

 

blow fire to embers, 

steal what you presumed lost, 

like your ax or your child’s soul. 

 

It’s all filth and gall. Heathens  

will fall. You must have faith. 

Practice faith. Breathe in prayer. 

 

Exhale sorrow like Our Lord 

on the cross who will conquer. 

them demons escorting Black Death. 

 

IV. Venality and the Burial of the Wicked 

 

Those foreigners practice black magic. 

They steal food, women, and jobs –   

so says the King – Our women and food  

belong to the august. We’ll see our justice. 

 

Any intruder caught walking our earth  

shall be captured, tied. Then staked 

in fire with their feet slathered in fat. 

If they walk, their bones will powder. 

  

If they wink at our women, hang them.  

Strap weights to their testicles. 

When the rope slacks, with violence, jerk  

the rope and abrupt the fall. Let them walk.  

 

Loyal citizens, you must pay 

your tithes and half your crops 

to ensure we slaughter them,  

burn to ashes their black sins. 

 

You must sacrifice. Sacrifice for church 

bells to toll not sorrow but triumph, 

and for cymbalists playing shiny sounds 

to assuage God’s remaining vengeances. 

 

V. Life without Panic   

 

All we have is legacy –  

that rotting cross staked 

in earth, a scarecrow that guides 

the dead who try to bloom. 

 

VI. The Dance 

 

For years, the hole’s fetid stink  

of dead bodies swirled through town, 

but today, odours of smoked cod, 

fresh grass, and our warm river, 


where Young Troffea, dances  

for one week to reel away 

black blood and waltz in red.  

We circle and breathe in twirls.  

 

No black blood. Nor trauma.  

Just unspoken salvation.


 

 

 

Tristan’s Leap: A Seance Conducted with Tristan on Saturday, May 11, 2024, 4 p.m. (Saturday, May 11, 1213 10 p.m. in Tristan’s Time)

 

– “Sir Tristan, may God help you, for you have lost this world and the next.” – Ogrin in Tristan and Iseut 

 

I stand in this castle’s window 

The highest one above the thistles 

For love, I’m ready to leap to death. 

 

Tristan. Tristan. Are you conscious? Tristan? 

 

Aghast! the voice is in my head 

again. Alas, another reason for me  

to leap. What do you want of me this time?” 

 

We need you. We need of you to perform 

a miracle. A miracle or test  

of faith. A faith in me, the one above. 

 

Damn these trumpets in my thoughts. 

With certainty, I supped too much poison  

or philter. Whatever it is. What is it? 

 

You are awake to love’s language, my words 

on their tangled tongues of mis-construment. 

You are to stretch wide your bloody nightdress.  

 

I hear your command. It is clear and true, 

by reason, faith, and logic, you want me 

to leap to flight. Like a swallow to sea. 

 

Yes. You must soar for me. For me, the one 

you cannot see, commands to you to fly 

and to land and perch upon that stone. 

 

My nightdress spreads as angel’s wings 

on descent from where you speak. To hell. 

With you, it’s either love or death. Away! 

 

Tristan, can you hear me? . . . Are you there? 

Tristan. Tristan. Are you conscious? Tristan? 

Trsitan, did you leap? Leap for love or death? 

 

I am here. I leapt for love and hoped to soar  

but longed for death to silence you. My love,  

now, is near, and my ghost is long from you.



 

 

Recently Found Report Titled “Splendiferous New Beginning for the Dead”

  

– from The Office of the Dead, circa 1363 

– for Stacia  

 

Three rotting corpses on cadaver  

monuments, by osmosis or spell,  

sprout leaves and branches.  

 

Three drunk humans, 

by liquor or group flogging, 

sing and spit at the Lord,  

 

and they doubt the afterlife.  

As those decaying dead 

debate encounter strategies,  

 

“Should we crawl or sprint  

or spring? Chatter or scream?  

What do these humans need?”  

 

the living doubt they’ll die  

soon enough, “I am afraid.”  

A dead twists her leg,  

 

“And so you will be.”  

“I do not believe in you three.”  

“We are,” said a dead, “well and will be  

 

what you will” and applauds.  

“You are devils. One, two, three.”  

“Beware of her and him and me, us  

 

us three, we dance with every body 

Are you rich or poor? Take my hand   

but not too hard. I’ll spin you down –  

 

a splendour if for us.” And here we,  

The Office of the Dead, on contract  

written in red, from the Lord,  

 

arrive and bury a cross betwixt. We said, 

“As per the contract, the dead shall live  

here, and the living shall never cross  

into that domain, until they do, after.”









 

Doctor Schnabel Enters Brueghel’s The Triumph of Death: Friday, April 7, 1347 

Ending with a line from Giovanni Villani 

 

I. I Should Have Headed South 

 

Columns of fire rise in the north. 

Even merchant ships flame. 

 

The townsfolk feel protected 

here behind the lagoon.  

 

II. Invasion of the Lagoon 

 

                                  Off the port, 

ships capsize. I did not realize  

 

skeletons could swim. They did 

the backstroke and spat salt water. 

 

III. Invasion of the Coast 

 

Skeletons have no rank or file  

or officers. They do not respect  

hierarchies. They are well  

 

organized. They flank  

three sides of town 

without Satan. 

 

IV. Unaware Townsfolk 

 

A table is set for a mordant dinner  

of five. Yesterday, it was for twelve.  

Tomorrow, for one, or none.  

 

Leftover omelettes on clean, white  

tablecloth beside red napkins.  

I’m hungry. I should eat. I should run. 

 

V. The Warning 

 

Bony hands yank lanyards. 

Church bells clang 

 

Skeletons exit the vestibule 

in priestly, white tunics. 

 

Priests’ heads bob 

in the bloody canal. 

 

A skeleton in the clock face  

spins counterclockwise.  

 

I adjust my reading stones. 

I might have time to flee. 

 

VI. Invasion of Town 

 

A naked man with his dogs 

runs across a grassy hillside 

from a skeleton with a sword. 

 

Skeletons on the rocky coast 

construct ladders and scaffolding. 

Hung men drop into a heap. 

 

Clutters of skeletons engulf  

a gang of bearded men. 

They are shaved then lose their heads. 

 

The town’s east entrance. 

The walls collapse. 

There are too many to count. 

 

A coffin on wheels rolls 

with a dead mother and baby 

skeletons crawling out. 

 

I should leave posthaste. 

 

VII. Fishing During the Invasion 

 

A skeleton with only a spear  

racks a pile of giant catfish. 

 

A pair of skeletons cast a wide net, 

catch six shrieking men. 

 

Black birds circle above 

awaiting their chance. 

 

 

 

 

VIII. The Profiteers 

 

Backgammon and poker  

tournaments unravel.  

Gamblers and bookies crawl  

beneath the table with the stashed  

aces and queens.  

           

                              The king 

in polished armor, velvet cape, and gold 

crown. A skeleton holds an hour 

glass lowering him to earth. 

 

The king’s last sight,  

his barrels of coins – 

enough for all the dead  

and dying eyes – usurped  

by a skeleton. 

 

                        Tonight, the dead 

discover there is no ferryman 

playing a flute by a river 

to escort their infected souls.  

                                        

I should return tomorrow  

to unburden all these hopeless  

eyes before the greengrocer 

inflates the price of eggs 

 

and vendors, their price on herbs  

which alleviate mortality. 

 

IX. Love in the Time of Black Death 

 

A wife runs from her husband 

who runs into a crowd who run 

to the long house aside 

an army of skeletons with shields 

and spears.  

 

                     A skeleton 

on the roof, beats war’s rhythm 

on a battered skin drum. 

 

Another skeleton tackles the wife.  

Another serves her a platter of skulls.  

She will never eat again.                                                                                              

 

A man with a mandolin  

serenades a lady in her lap. 

She caresses his hair. 

  

A skeleton lurks on her back, 

serenades her with its mandolin, 

lifts the dead man’s flute, 

 

slides it through her ears. 

If the skeleton has lungs, 

it will play a jig. 

 

The flautist wind blows. 

She passes away 

to all this glorious music. 

 

X. The Flying Red Horse 

 

A saddled-in skeleton with a scythe 

flies across the town square. 

With one swoop, fifteen heads. 

 

The eastern sky is bright blue  

with streaks of gray clouds. 

Anxious black birds drop. Thud. 

 

XI. The Holy Ghost 

 

To survive, we need ghosts. 

The sun rises like hope. 

 

The western sky flames. 

On the mountain side,  

 

apparitions –  

smoke floating away. 

 

XII. I Should Head South 

 

This will not end until




Tom Holmes, is the Assistant Professor of English at Nashville Community College – Clarksville. For twenty-two years, Tom was the founding editor and curator of Redactions: Poetry & Poetics. The final issue is due out in the summer of 2024. ☹ He teaches at Nashville State Community College (Clarksville). Blog, The Line Break: thelinebreak.wordpress.com/. Twitter: @TheLineBreak

 

 

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