Charles Wilkinson
Note: ‘Sephardic sweetness’ – Portuguese Jews helped the Caribbean planters to perfect the process of making rum
Charles Wilkinson’s recent poems have appeared in Poetry Wales, Poetry Salzburg (Austria), Shearsman, New Walk, Tears in the Fence, Envoi, Otoliths, Futures Trading and other journals. A pamphlet, Ag & Au, appeared from Flarestack Poets. A full-length collection of his poetry is due from Eyewear in 2018.
He lives near mountains in Wales, where the members of the ovine community command the high places and are better looking than the politicians. A Twist in the Eye, his collection of weird fiction and strange tales, is out from Egaeus Press.
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The Contraction under his third finger a knot below skin swells in the palm the grammar of healing gone wrong for what connects will thicken till nails turn inwards & the claw cannot grip; no pain — harm’s in the failure to hold an object or agree, for no crab will shake on it; the northern inheritance of the man whose name might mean Viking’s son, if the contraction’s both the word & the flesh the incidence highest in Iceland & Norway; the cause unknown, although they say what repeats wounds: the tennis elbow, the housemaid’s knee as did hard hours white-rowing across cold sea: power from the shoulders passing the force down the arms to welt & scar the salt: oh the drumbeat for dragon-thrust, through spindrift & spume! the rage of pillage — & the spread eagle, cage-cracked & rib-red! here he tears dry skin, for its comfort of hurt, as if returning to the hand that held the oar between havoc & home, with no sight of land or hope of port, when the quest’s forgotten in unresting rhythm running through the rowlocks, when there are only water’s luminous instants, where the wake’s forgotten, & no horizon for a ship in the long now of sailing — Note: Dupuytren’s contraction: a disease that starts with nodules under the skin on the palm. In its later stages, it can cause one or more fingers to bend. The condition is sometimes known as Viking hand. shells strung out on a necklace Qualifying not the tale tainted in the long telling but a line attested through spit & the traces in the blood, though there’s no locating Eden, the first place for dwelling the bowmen’s poison displacing a people with pointed heads Correcting an island once without a race, the haunt for feral boar, yet bones give proof of primal Amerindian festival, before the white hands raising of the roofs earlier than the arrival, an Arawak adze made from a sharp-lipped shell Improving the last of luxuriance: cutting the canopies; & the Carribs gone or fled; cottoning on to wealth as a good smoke led to land- scapes & the death of trees After extinction, the great leap from jungle to farm & garden Distilled perfect for the white gold: some Portuguese advise the Sephardic science of sweetness; the coming of the tall true grass spiking the stream; a new craft making rum process of crushed cane, cogs & oak casks producing death at sea Unnamed a loss more than nominal: after the Middle Passage, the branding on black; at the port of entry Green Monkeys from Senegal are all pets for the gentry renaming - the right of the masters; elision of language yet sounds lisp both ways Impacting the trade winds & a hurricane change; old flora fading; Great House, poor shacks & sugar beet; there’s no shade for the Johnny Red Legs’ fair flesh razed raw in the heat how the home rhythms last in the beat of dance, the Landship legacy Breaking exile is the red robin’s absence & a gain of humming birds, clear skies & killdeer; then strong winds bending palms: incidental music for an em- pire ending though first: ‘lick & lock up done wid! Hurrah for Jin-Jin’ a dry well & the base of a windmill; the Great House abandoned on the hill top; land sinking to powder on a swarming beach: the sands warm & coral pink carifestafoodsurfcropoverboogieboardingshadytreeturtleswim not sea glass or star fish, but shapes cleared of death: the huts empty or a choice of shells, gaps behind the fans. an emblem of voice: the conch held waiting for new breath these glimpses, seen shifting on the gloss, confirmed in the blood
Note: ‘Sephardic sweetness’ – Portuguese Jews helped the Caribbean planters to perfect the process of making rum
Charles Wilkinson’s recent poems have appeared in Poetry Wales, Poetry Salzburg (Austria), Shearsman, New Walk, Tears in the Fence, Envoi, Otoliths, Futures Trading and other journals. A pamphlet, Ag & Au, appeared from Flarestack Poets. A full-length collection of his poetry is due from Eyewear in 2018.
He lives near mountains in Wales, where the members of the ovine community command the high places and are better looking than the politicians. A Twist in the Eye, his collection of weird fiction and strange tales, is out from Egaeus Press.
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