WALL TO WALL

(Passing through the Poetry Library, Royal Festival Hall)
 

 

It happens now and then,

this killing time.

I’m looking at a wall of words,

as tall to me as those that cleave

the West Bank or Belfast.

Shelf upon stacked shelf:

this cache of tender conscience

an Armalite gathering dust.

Yet spines are all unequal heights,

leave ground unoccupied.

 

So tread the empty moors

and build a wall, outdoors.

Make local choices: whether limestone

for its grain or granite to endure.

Pack flat your rough-hewn slabs,

laying their battered faces

into a slant.

Place coping stones to crown the rise.

Wind can whistle through its heart,

find line of least resistance.



  xii. 2019 – i. 2020

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