Tag Archives: poetry by Ian D. Hall

One Last Infinite Jest.

 

What if she wasn’t dead,

found floating down river,

bathed in fallen leaves,

a dead man’s finger on her pulse

as her face turns grey, to draw

out a murderer, clever

hero, a feminine trope

dashed, thrown to her love

in England, a false sign of madness

spreading, in him melancholia,

in her a wailing of the emotions…

all lies, she drew the murderer out

and paid for it with her love,

as he lay poisoned by the touch of foil,

dead as she had thought to be

His Last Breath.

Seen

through the afterglow

and embers

of your love for me,

my face is burnt,

my eyes streaked with pain

and my heart broken,

a final beat,

a minute later

one more sign of life,

clouds over, the sun which once

streamed through the window

and gave a mystery to the room

now has been replaced by the stillness

of thunderstorms, and in that flash

of weightless lightning, my face is illuminated

one final time, killed

by the love you had

for me.

Avacado.

It is hard not to rate yourself,

compare your existence

to that of the smashed avocado

when wondering how you fit in

a world that gave you a voice,

you see that green filling

spread all over a piece of toast

and you wonder first

whatever happened to the black pudding,

when did the mug of builders’ tea

and the steam covering the waitress’s face

give way to a coffee that costs more

than you ever paid for your first piece of vinyl,

when did it become O.K. to have your name

Last Night, I Watched An Angel Sing Your Praises.

 

Emerging from the spotlight glare,

I watched, enraptured, spooked by the divine,

the whispering ghost of poetry, of words

teased out and song like, capturing the mood,

capturing the daylight pulse, sweetly tempered

by a trumpet which plays in the ether

and calls to the angels, they have to find room

somewhere, for here on Earth, it seems one

has escaped and sinks her blush free lips into

a mortal man’s vision, tasting it in her mouth,

tasting it go round and round, sideways

she chews it over, relishing the genius

On The Day They Said Goodbye To Ken.

On the day they line the streets,

I hope they remember to smile.

There should be no tears falling,

not in this place, only in the comfort

of a joke well told, the punch line

creating laughter

in the crowd, for on this day

as they line the streets for a son of Liverpool,

waving tatty-bye for now, tickle sticks

in hand, clutched tight, remember

the man brought joy,

one that cannot be replaced.

 

Ian D. Hall 2018

Cracks And Damp.

I keep looking for the cracks,

the tell tale sign of disrepair,

that stems from attic to foundation

and the worrying whisper of wet,

damp through rumours and idle gossip

of the leak somewhere in this housed body;

perhaps I should look for the solid join,

too few,

too few original parts,

just the undertone of shifting

boards that sigh, telling me it’s too late,

my edifice, my home

is breaking down.

 

Ian D. Hall 2018

Silica.

I go to search for you

online as I haven’t heard from you

in quite some time, I picture your face

and I smile, I remember your laugh,

your loves, the sad times and the moments

that fell to Earth in between,

thousands of ground  dust silica particles

inhaled and tearing apart the breath for you,

as I struggle to think of your name,

once a volcano

erupting

reduced to shredded glass and faded recollections

suffering under the weight off the landslide mud

that has come to clog my own dying volcano.

When The Flood Comes.

 

There is no water that flows or drips

down the drain and to be carried

out to sea, it stands

almost still, interrupted in its quiet

domination of all it touches

only by the gentle aftermath of wind,

slowly pushing at the edges, slowly,

slowly, rippling back time.

There is no water that flows from the drain

to the sea, it stands moat like, defence

in its favour, defiant, as the one grate

it surrounds, stands aloof and proud

to be on a higher plane

Black Hole Road.

There’s a Black Hole in his road

that soaks up all the rain,

sunshine and warmth that disappears

without a trace

the deeper it goes, killing

all sound, creating only noise, in its journey

to obliterate all that may contain life;

it doesn’t realise that as the once reflected sun

beamed off its water, it too holds now existence,

it is carefree chaos,

the black pitted small hole

in the journey

that has become the architect of destruction.

 

Inspired by the photography of John Chatterton.

Helen Of Troy In Later Years.

The living embodiment of beauty,

that was Helen of Troy,

the reason why men went to war,

battle stained, the sacking

and destruction

of a noble city.

Yet few realise that in later life,

she became a glutton, fast food addict

and as her handsome noble features

began to fade away,

she became known as Helen,

the face that munched a thousand chips.

 

Ian D. Hall 2018