Thursday, 24 September 2020

The Discarded Photograph.(Completed Poem).


When, by chance, I picked up the photograph,
I thought I had picked up a portrait of you
Laughing by the seaside, but private, as you
                                                        always are,
Flowers in your hair band, a Russian novel 
                                     balanced on one knee. 
The tent was quite familiar - quite your style -  
An old Welsh blanket hoisted on four sticks -
Hoisted loosely between the breast shaped
                                                     sand dunes
To make a snug, a private little squat
To be secreted in.
I really thought this portrait was of you,
The ink black birthmark printed on the cheekbone; 
Fine blue eyes under lacquered lashes;
Gilded hair cascading over shoulders;
A platinum wedding ring.
Every detail brought you clearly to my mind,
The scent of you, the touch of you; your young
                                                 half naked body
Curled up on the settee next to mine.
But then I noticed the photo had been tinted,
The dye applied with great care by an artist
Expert in the craft;
An artist who plied this craft from time to 
                                                               time
To put a few half crowns in empty jam jars. -
I slide the picture back where I had found it,
Lodged between two novels,
Two pre-war novels, left out, I hope by chance,
Among discarded beer cans and pizza packs,
Left out to rot upon the churchyard wall. -
You say I was meant to find this pile of books,
But I dispute this; I had not passed the church 
                                              for several weeks,
And I rarely stop to pick through unloved things,
Not even hardback books once sold in Woolworth
To young ladies of my mother`s generation.
But I am glad I found this photo, although I dare
                                                             not keep it;
I do not own her past, so I must let her go.


Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
July 23rd. - 26th. - September 24th. 2020.
December 12th. 2020. - October 9th. 2022.

Tuesday, 22 September 2020

Thursday, 17 September 2020

Satori in the Time of Covid. (Revised)

 A sudden moment of inexplicable joy,
The sky white with light on a cold dull day.
Sad Rooks, vagabonds hunched in skeletal
                                                     trees,
Fretfully cawing:
Shoppers hooded, leaning forward into the
                                                     wind
Unaware of the strange beauty of the sky.
The sudden white light illuminating clouds
Fat with ice crystals.

Ice is grey and black when trapped in clouds.

Sackcloth clouds have dragged in a phoney
                                                  winter,
Three long weeks before the autumn equinox
Roughs up city squares, brown fields and red
                                        brick houses
With a thief`s impunity.
The thief that sneaked in through the hall and
                                                 kitchen
then cleared off fast with my phone and
                                                camera
comes painfully to mind.
My next door neighbour had left the back gate
                                                    open.

My next door neighbour has plenty to answer for.

So how come this short lived moment of real joy?
This shattering joy, inexplicable and astonishing!
The clouds aglow as though lit up by fireflies.
The garden incandescent with red roses.
The morning air quite still, dream heavy, free
                                   of diesel fumes.
Time weighed down with silence - my heart beats
                                     loud and clear.
How come this interaction with Satori?
How come such peace in this year of
                                                   Covid?
When I think things through I cannot find an answer,
I`ll just hunker down and get on with my day.

Trevor John Karsavin Potter. 
September 7th. - 16th. - October 11th. 2020.

Tuesday, 15 September 2020

A Note for my Diary. (Newly Revised).


A book of Chinese poems on my lap
I sit in the church waiting for the clock to strike.

Today is a day for reading.
Yesterday, a day for skyping
Gave me no space to sit alone and think,
To take off my mask in a quiet and lonely corner.

I wasted many hours on the telephone
Failing to organize an on-line meeting,
But I did find time to write a ten line poem,
Which is something - I suppose.

Now I sit alone in this cold suburban church,
A book of Chinese poems on my lap.
I will have to leave when the clock strikes 2 - I`m told -
Time for prayer is strictly regulated.
I am not at prayer now - just simply being alone.
I pretend the clock aint getting on my nerves.

When the doors are locked I shall stroll into the park
And yell Tu Fu at the sulky Autumn skies.


Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
September 15th. - 16th. 2020. - October 11th. 2020.
December 5th. 2020. - October 9th. 2022.

Monday, 14 September 2020

(1) Listening to Scriabin.(New Version) (2) The Wrecker.

Listening to Scriabin. (New Version).


Burdened with sound
The air becomes dark, like the depths of the ocean;
Slow waves moving overhead
Interrogate the sun.

The audience sways gently to the swell and fall
Of the Poem of Ecstasy;
A tight packed shoal tugged and rocked by currents
Stronger than instinct.

This, perhaps is what the Dervish looks for
When he spins and whirls in meditation,
Not transcendence, but quietly physical,
This, perhaps, is the death of reason.

Some think it is better not to be born at all,
Not to be separated from the stillness
That hermits seek among the icy mountains:
Some think it is better not to know such music.

Burdened with sound
The air becomes dark, like the depths of the ocean;
The audience sways gently to the swell and fall 
Of the Poem of Ecstasy.


 Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
August 29th. - 31st. 2020. - September 29th. 2020.
October 12th. 2020.
Developed from a poem sketched 20th. April 2015.

                       *      

             The Wrecker. 


Last night I tossed a stone high in the air,
It has not hit the pond yet,
The surface calm, unruffled,
The moon a perfect picture.

Perhaps if I had skimmed the stone across the stillness,
The ripples would be spreading
Hour upon hour upon hour,
Tearing the picture apart.

If the pond were a crystal plate I would have to smash it,
Smash it to glittering shards,
Moonlight on tremulous water. -
Perfection, for some reason, breaks my heart.


Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
September 14th. - 15th. 2020.

Friday, 11 September 2020

September 11th. 2020.


Falling in The Fall
Leaf
        upon leaf
        upon leaf -
The lives of all I have
                          loved
Becoming yesterday -
Becoming next years
                 leaf mould -
Rain scented
          Springtime
                 leaf mould -
Earth from which April
                        Tulips
Shall lift their emptied
                           cups.


Trevor John Karsavin Potter.
 September 11th. - 12th. 2020.      

Glass Bubble.