Friday, November 30, 2012

United States

Israel
Canada
The Czechs
(Václav Havel - peace be with you)
The Marshall Islands
Micronesia
Nauru
Palau
Panama
Squirm
in your blood-soaked boots

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Beachcombing again



I went down the beach for a poem, 
and brought back the sound of the sea

Today, midweek, the beach is breathing with relief
The last storm’s passed, the next not yet conceived 
A trill of dancing sandpipers flit along the water’s edge
Half-hearted wavelets sigh - benign if not good-natured.

Black kite wheel and soar, scouring for a meal 
They’ll snatch from a child’s hand -
A black crow pokes a fish carcass 
And from behind the Emperor’s garden wall
(keeping us out, and him in) 
A content chainsaw buzzes, while a blackbird sings.

Over the red paint peeling bridge and a black shag scuttles ­  
Scampering from the river mouth he’d drifted in 
His tattered Mac flapping as his webbed feet slap and patter
Neck craning over the water, to his sentry mates on the rocks, 
White with guano icing powder like Christmas puds

They eye him askance – you can almost hear them tut 
Drying their wings, stretched
Like bird black angels of the east
Above, two hawkish would-be lovers loop
In the clear blue sky, with the green blue sea below
And a great black back swoops.

Slow white paper plane sailing boats fleck the line
Where the far side of the bay meets
The blue-grey back-drop of Fuji-san
Forever rising, clad in her colossal snowy cloak.

A black twin-winged helicopter chops and thuds
From the base behind the woods
Menacingly improbable like a dark side bumblebee
Heading no-one knows,
A steady beeline through the immense sea sweep 
No doubt up to no good

Two aged ojisan sit in broken plastic chairs
And point out to the younger ones
Clambering into their white boats
With their red and yellow nets
Dried out by the warm November sun 
What will they bring back as it sets?

A flock of squealing school kids 
Pours onto the soft green grass
All bright-greenly capped
Their teachers like shepherds without a dog

Hunched in the sunlit breeze, a few young mums 
Compare their toddlers toddling
One helps her little'uns stick bits of driftwood beach bamboo
Loosely poked in the soft sand
A kind of ring fence, a corral against the sea -

I’ll be back soon to see 
What’s left of their defences

Beachcombing



Beachcombing on a Sunday Morning in Japan, November, 2012


Today I found a monkey skull
Washed up on the beach
Rolled in the black sand surf
With the sparkling stones
And wrenched up seaweed tossed
With whispering shells 
Fresh, not yet picked pristine,
And young, the pinkish teeth
Not yet stained or chipped
I picked it up, like a doll’s head
A girl’s breast, cupped in my palm,
Golf ball gapes where eyes recently
Flickered and darted at birds and butterflies
And rippling leaves -
I wonder if she fell
Was she washed to a river and drowned?
What did she see as she slipped
Teetering out on her own?
Her mother’s flashed alarm?
Too late, gone, out of reach?

I often wander this beach
Looking for shells and driftwood,
Rounded stones and beach glass
Plastic toy figures lost
Sanded over by children’s feet,
And translucent coloured lighters dropped or thrown
 – bird bones –
But the head dome of a fellow primate
Whose non-eyes feign surprise or open wonder
Held here in my hand, rescued
From the seething washback waves,
The obscure deep,
Pulses a primal button marked care for me,
For this needy trusting child

I wonder what they make of me, the locals
Always there, always alone,
Strolling
What’s he doing now? What’s he got?
chotto hen - weird gaijin -
I pass a cluster of them, or us
The 30-something son, the local wife,
The white-haired grand father
Come to see his offspring sprung
This side of the planet,
Clearly his first time
The brand-new thick cords,
The pocketed hands, slightly raised chin,
The air of nonchalant bewilderment 
Not quite concealed, trying to take it in,
To accept, to understand why
His son is rooting in such a foreign land

And there an office Dad plays beach ball
With his nippers,
His wife sun-dozing 
And there a pair of Tokyo escapees
Earnestly boil a kettle for tea
Wrapped up like sherpas
Huddled by their flapping tent 

And everywhere the shapely wetsuits,
Cheerfully come to surf,
Bobbing half in hope and fear
On their expectant boards,
Like a rodeo, gazing out to sea -

Today the waves are crashing in
Bright sunshine spray
Roaring, racing, long-travelled sea miles
Night and day, for this,
their last climactic glory
- then broken, defeated
Spent by grains of sand -
My beach – I know her well –
Where her beaten rocks are lurking
Her suffering curves
Every day she’s little changed 
Typhoon-shifted, fresh detritus strewn -
And though we’ve spun through the universe
She’s still here, the same
Her breathing heartbeat soothes me
While I’m lost in the newness of now
In the need to simply be
with the wind and the waves
And the monkey skull

Back home, in minutes, and the TV screen is full
Of more dead in Palestine, more dead in Kabul

Pieces


I spent my life in pieces -
Thank you
For glueing me back together