Using another poem as a template
Not quite the same bus I saw in Kenya, but its purpose is identical. And that's me, sitting on the lefthand side at the front. |
Safari bus, fourteen foot long, ugly,
Misplaced mechanism, black tigering the white,
Photographic
predators: the rows of Nikon lenses,
They collect among
the zebra like flies.
Or move, in
single-file formation
Across a landscape,
grey with dust.
Anomalies against an
ancient skyline,
Silhouetted by a
scarlet sun.
Near the waterholes,
hardware at the ready,
Casting long
shadows;
Locked onto this
week’s lucky break, a lioness.
Or feeding vervet
monkeys peanuts.
Snub-nosed
predators, windows shut,
Not to be opened on
any account;
They raise the roof
instead, mushroom style,
The exhaust
vibrating gently, spewing grey.
Three we watched
yesterday,
Shimmering in the
hot sun; then
There were four,
then five, then eight -
But by nightfall
there were none.
For even now, the
darkness belongs to us.
And you know they
spare nothing,
Not even each
other. Two of them,
Stranded by the side
of a rutted road -
Laced together,
shredded metal intertwined.
One headlamp stares
upward, blind: another
Lies shattered,
shards of glass
Growing like desert
roses in the dust.
Sometimes they
congregate, their meeting place
A clearing, flanked
by gnarled giants
Who remember greener
times
Before the cattle
and the fires.
Bleached and ravaged
plain,
It was as wide as
Africa. It hid
Us in its desiccated
scrub, but let us watch
The ivory face of
death: now
They shoot with
Ektachrome,
Raking the bush with
their telephotos
For what might move,
aching to still it
Splashes of dye on
resin-coated paper.
Pied kingfishers
hover above the water,
Black and white
reflections: a larger one
Peels away from the
others, changes gear,
And drives slowly
towards us, watching.
In 2008, long before the Russia invasion of Crimea, I wrote a poem ostensibly about Chernobyl but stating my feelings towards Russia, which had been one of the good guys whilst Gorbachev was in power and promoting glasnost but had taken a darker turn under Putin. When the UK agreed to buy gas from Russia I was incandescent with fury. As the child of a Polish father, I had been brought up with a deep distrust of Russia, and I could see what was coming. My fears became a reality even worse than my imaginings, and so I have written a sequel to that first poem using the same form as the original. It uses something called the Onegin Stanza, or Pushkin sonnet, which was invented and popularised by the poet Alexander Pushkin.
REACTORS
However red its trees once were;
Przewalski’s horse, the eagle owl,
New overlords of birch and fir,
For birdsong measures distance now.
The bison has replaced the cow,
And mankind’s gold has turned to dross;
Each house is carpeted with moss.
But elk and lynx and
wolf, beware -
(Though all thought such a beast was dead)
The footprint of a Russian bear.
Watch out! Beneath that hairy skin
Mutated genes may lurk within…
THE NIGHTINGALE
However brave its people are
This war is waged by mobile phones
Against a beast who would be tsar
The nightingale in times gone by
Left India, compelled to fly
To distant lands, by songs so sad
It stayed to sing, to make folk glad,
They put the bird upon their flag
But blue and gold is tinged with red
As buildings fall and men are dead
The flag, now tattered like a rag
Still flies. What country’s next in line?
It could be yours, it could be mine.
Comments
So I read on and I loved your poems, particularly the first one, Safari Bus. I note the same number of verses!
Your idea of having a framework in which to write really succeeds and you have produced some marvellous poems based on experiences and linked to your knowledge of poets like Pushkin. The two 'Russian' poems are a very good critique of Putin's actions. How interesting that you father was Polish: I spent two online ESREA conferences in Wroclaw during the pandemic when people couldn't travel. I am also a great lover of Russian literature and often it is the only way they have of voicing their struggles as Alexander Solzhenitsyn found with A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.
Anyway, now that we have lost Sandra Horn there is a dearth of poetry on our site so thank you for reviving it.