Tag Archives: poetry by Ian D. Hall

A Spotlight On The Muse Or The God.

The spotlight hits the Guinness jar hair

and the shadow of black denim hides a multitude

of other people’s sins as she holds the guitar

as if holding the heart ransom

and I feel mine break each time the dry ice swirls

around her fingers and the lesson of the moment

was not to fall in lust but to appreciate the gliding

searing heat of metal upon skin upon thought upon delivery.

 

Exhausted I sit up straight backed and erect

as blood, life, animated kicked in electric driven soul

Celebrate…

On any day worth celebrating,

not one filled with jingoistic pride

in which by virtue of having a bigger gun,

a more powerful machine, a more sturdier device

which you reached for the safety first and dangled

the instrument of possible torture around

threatening to put at least one load between the eyes

of the nearest person who dared open their mouths

in shock or disengaged amusement,

on any day worth celebrating I would rather take

the moment afforded to pause and wonder

if you would enjoy it too;

September’s End Of Days.

Seventy Two floors up,

we three watched as the Tsunami

tidal wave rode past

the concrete structure we were hiding in

and we wept for the humanity lost.

 

It was that buffeting of the concrete

or maybe the scream from the young

woman’s mouth, siren like, distilled, vodka alerted,

that woke me up with my nerves trembling

and laying down on the cold

end of days September sofa,

Tsunami sweat lodged in my thin, greying eyebrows.

 

No less disturbing than the time I was forced to watch

Orphan

We have become the orphans of a broken promise.

The product of discarded point of view

that stopped being relevant the moment their mouths closed

and the hum of the ignored became louder.

 

We are the orphans of deceit, lies and digital tape,

of meaningless thought and the near dispiriting

words of gathered hope that dissipates and fades

into the wind at the breath of the merest gentle gust

that tussles with our hair, pats our shoulders with thunder

and yet is as invisible as the join between

Time Passes Not.

Time passes,

the poet once wrote

but in amongst the autumn

thoughts and withered unseen tears

I dream of you,

I dream of you because my childhood

in amongst leafy Oxfordshire lanes

and burnt blue skies,

of winter depths in which a broken heart nestled

and turned to a poet’s words for comfort,

in spring when the fire in my stomach blossomed

and war and unimagined kiss wrestled

within the summer heat away,

I dream of you often for Time has not passed,

Time…

Ventriloquist’s Doll.

My mouth is shut yet the words flow

like crushed diamonds flowing

over the edge of a winter’s cascade,

the avalanche of all that you have sowed,

scattered to the winds in an attempt

to confound and confuse the issue

all dealt with a sneer, the face of a person

who believes themselves to be a God

to dictate to a lesser mortal

what they must say in praise magnificence…

 

You are not a God, a divine spirit of spoken word

and I am not your doll to do your bidding,

At Two In The Morning.

At two in the morning,

the chest lets you know that you’ve had enough

and that all that you accomplished so far,

the squiggles of indecisive word play foreplay,

the slight chuckle of flirtation with a new sexy

phrase dressed in glimmering ball gown

and the jealous, seething, rage of an old favourite

as it gets dropped in its favour

for a single novel line,

all that you written and fought for in the darkness

means nothing,

not a damn thing as all turns grey before your eyes

Autumn In The Bootle Graveyard.

The wind picks up from the Mersey and races dog legged

and fancy free past sun bleached stones

and weathered time bitten

faces of the angels staring, unblinking and without humour

against the elements, and yet they feel remorse

for the quiet and solitude offered

amongst the grave stones.

 

The graveyard is unnatural in the lowering

of the September Sun, and the marking of a season,

unnerving as the youthful, over colour filled flowers

placed in the glass bubble shell wave with less vigour

99 Percent

I shout with the 99 percent that you sir are wrong.

Your misguided belief that we dislike, abhor, detest and despise

you, some would say hate but I would not want to

see you put up against the same crumbling

partition that is in some measure destroyed with the bullet holes

of the lesser dead, I would not see you strive for martyrdom;

is born out of jealousy,

a suspicion of covetousness and envy,

that your singular belief

that if we don’t have the same level of money as you

Room 101.

Into my own personal and despairing Room 101

I would place you, for the lack of noble spirit

you betray, you seek to deceive with

and place any type of good will towards,

your disloyalty to the abiding

clarity of Human spirit

is but a disease, a smoking stain

on the face of the Earth

and I judge you unfit

to be smiled upon.

 

I would place those loyal to black raging heart,

I would consign to nothingness

those who seek to destroy all that is good,