Wednesday 23 November 2011

catching up with my sleeplessness

He seemed to be searching for his lost joys, now as insubstantial as old dreams wisping away as the amnesia of morning grasps them and tears them away up into the light. For a long time he read through his journals and days seemed to pace. In his head the titinus had stopped though he knew as soon as he realized it had stopped it slowly regained it's ringing. He had read only 10% of the population had it. For a moment he felt special that he was in an exclusive club, but that did not last. He looked outside at the gradeur of the trees on the other side of the road, but he knew he could not take a step beyond his open door, so went to bed and watched the strengthening light reaching along the hallway. He heard a plane, like a wish, overhead, and the regularity of the motorbike and the neighbourhood cars going off too work then finally the beeping of refuse lorry backing up. A hush fell then.

Sunday 8 May 2011

None know now

None know now what once I was. Stillness now after I felt I floated offward, improbable as a half heard shadow, feeeling dodgy by default. I try to twist into memories, wonder why they seem so recalled while others seem locked away like a dream of a long forgotten day dream that won't return. Turn the key from the inside, leap out at me shocking me with suprise and a lightened heart.

Yes, none know now what once I was and I include myself in their number. I stumble, fall and land here still, unencumbered by the awful rage, impotent as a raven's shriek, but the lock turns behind me, unable to scream or sing instead am I as silent as a gossamer web, or uncluttered fingers, or toes of lead.

Saturday 9 April 2011

The ageless Facsist

The dictator has time today to watch the birdies fly away. He enjoys the views up in the hills the dots of people far away. The dictator has no time today to merge into a scene he has not controlled. He cannot synchronize the birds or melt the high snow he has no thought of those below. This dictator knows even his power cannot make beauty more fair

Thursday 7 April 2011

Jac and Shea I am searching for a story. I left it somewhere under a granite paperweight. I wonder was it then when I forgot to dance, to close my eye, to watch the unemployed Jacobites spread technicolour. As if I would forget, as if I would leave you in the past when no matter how often I stand beneath a rainstorm I could never wash you away. Still imprinted with the original as a fingerprint seeks rare form, but floats off like a feather, lands later, too late for a lover and for dancing under the moon.

Tuesday 4 January 2011

Time Loop

In Time Loop Morelle's poetic style is given new vistas and countries, different times and myriad characters in this new novel. Written by a well-establishedEuropean writer, it is a complicated but avid read and I finished it in a couple of sittings.

In this day and age a novel about the Cathars would be replete with car chases, murderous minds in search of the Holy grail, a hero racing about in stolen cars, forgettting toilet breaks, a nice cup of tea, who falls platonically iin love and wonders when he's going to get something to eat, before or after he'd found Christ's Cup and climatically vanquishing the multifarious villans.

Time Loop breaks the mould. This is a personal story, or stories, a human tale, firmly jigsawed in reality. Set in the late nineties in rainy edinburgh and by contrast the heat and long enchanted Southern france. A man and woman meet on the well worn tourist trail of the extermination of the of the Cathars. One is married, while the other is a footloose musician with writer's block.

Instinct or intuition bring then together. The woman's husband, though not murderous and a very careful driver, is obsessed with discovering the truth of the powers of Christ's blood-red filled goblet, and gives our hero a good kicking that he did nothing to warrant.

Yet through dreams and esoteric synchronistic experiences the doors are open to early13th Century France.

Here, the Cathars faith in their beliefs are tested by the horrors, tortures and burnings at the stake. Both in Edinburgh and in France the two main characters and their reincarnation links of the past and future come to an understanding that love is the key.

The avid barbarism of the Roman Catholic Church and the over ambitious greed of the French King are far more disturbing than any recent action-packed shoot em up.

I wholly recommenend Morelle Smith's Time Loop andher other woek: Streets of Tirana, Almost Spring and her many poetry collections such as Deepwater Terminal and The Way Words Travel.

Time Loop is published by Playback Publications in Sandwick, Shetland, UK or at www.playbackarts.co.uk