Poem 191
Without darkness there’s no light, as they say – but they tend not to mention how skewed the proportions are, the overwhelming majority of the universe being made up of dark matter, the world of light minuscule against the black velvet backdrop …
( I like all of this, every image reverberates, for example the cool dark clockwork of a day or light as a tensile insect …
… the frozen-moment shadow of kids tossing a ball is borrowed from a Ray Bradbury short story … the last image owes something to a trippy seventies poster I had which featured a giant carp rising to swallow the moon … )
Shadows
Shadows are our best saviours reminding light of its limits letting us shine beside them a rainbow of flesh man shadow woman shadow the children and the ball passing on the brick wall all the cool dark clockwork of a day from the single cut-out shape at your feet a thousand rain upward at evening drifting like ash lying arm to arm on the water tangling down light and slipping it in their pockets as unnoticed as blood in blood shadows crawl on the moon crowd into black pyramids behind the planets at the petering end of it all light spindles into a tensile insect that a mouth of shadow rises from the shadow to take