Tony Beyer
Collateral
8 March 1941
the Luftwaffe
legitimately targeting
my future mother-in-law
who was dancing
the night away
with all the other
bright young things
at the Café de Paris
in Piccadilly
incidentally took the life
of band-leader
Ken ‘Snakehips’ Johnson
whose head was blasted
from his shoulders
during the first set
of the unluckiest
gig of his career
seven decades later
the clang
of German-made shrapnel
in a kidney bowl
after the nonagenarian ingénue
had complained about
discomfort in the neck
a survivor still
she remembers best
her best friend Lou
in a pale ball gown
screaming her head off
though there was nothing
the matter with her
photographs of the site
resemble Algiers in 1960
Beirut since 1972
Grozny or Sarajevo
through the 90s
Aleppo or Gaza City
Baghdad or Donetsk now
the same collapsed
walls and ceilings
displaced garments and limbs
rescuers standing around
under the lazy drizzle
of fractured mains
smoke ghosts in waiting
all the years gone
and the years ahead
while we persist in doing
these things to each other
Alice in Stalingrad
Horace in his
Ars Poetica
tells us to beware
the incongruous
assemblage of
diverse images
yet here
in the waking day
a horse’s frozen leg
stands as a signpost
a man’s severed hand
hangs aloft
from power lines
above the factory
for automatic pistols
there’s also
a factory
for handcuffs
another for
police truncheons
eminently defensible
while in the
lifespan since
security culture
has globalised
adding tasers
water cannon
water boarding
for people
not to be trusted
but controlled
like white rabbits
sprawled in snow
mimicking the stiff
capitulation
of the invader
now and again
you get fed up
with landscape
too green up close
too distantly blue
too easily replicated
shades of Chernobyl
wavering at the edge
of eyesight
the different
coloured moon
after Fukushima
(once you wore blue
now you are blue
and glow in the dark)
the dryish Czech pilsner
my older brother
swears by
claiming the radioactive
particles
preserve him
Tony Beyer is writing and teaching again in Taranaki, NZ.
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Collateral
8 March 1941
the Luftwaffe
legitimately targeting
my future mother-in-law
who was dancing
the night away
with all the other
bright young things
at the Café de Paris
in Piccadilly
incidentally took the life
of band-leader
Ken ‘Snakehips’ Johnson
whose head was blasted
from his shoulders
during the first set
of the unluckiest
gig of his career
seven decades later
the clang
of German-made shrapnel
in a kidney bowl
after the nonagenarian ingénue
had complained about
discomfort in the neck
a survivor still
she remembers best
her best friend Lou
in a pale ball gown
screaming her head off
though there was nothing
the matter with her
photographs of the site
resemble Algiers in 1960
Beirut since 1972
Grozny or Sarajevo
through the 90s
Aleppo or Gaza City
Baghdad or Donetsk now
the same collapsed
walls and ceilings
displaced garments and limbs
rescuers standing around
under the lazy drizzle
of fractured mains
smoke ghosts in waiting
all the years gone
and the years ahead
while we persist in doing
these things to each other
Alice in Stalingrad
Horace in his
Ars Poetica
tells us to beware
the incongruous
assemblage of
diverse images
yet here
in the waking day
a horse’s frozen leg
stands as a signpost
a man’s severed hand
hangs aloft
from power lines
above the factory
for automatic pistols
there’s also
a factory
for handcuffs
another for
police truncheons
eminently defensible
while in the
lifespan since
security culture
has globalised
adding tasers
water cannon
water boarding
for people
not to be trusted
but controlled
like white rabbits
sprawled in snow
mimicking the stiff
capitulation
of the invader
now and again
you get fed up
with landscape
too green up close
too distantly blue
too easily replicated
shades of Chernobyl
wavering at the edge
of eyesight
the different
coloured moon
after Fukushima
(once you wore blue
now you are blue
and glow in the dark)
the dryish Czech pilsner
my older brother
swears by
claiming the radioactive
particles
preserve him
Tony Beyer is writing and teaching again in Taranaki, NZ.
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