A companion to THE WORD OF SINNA LUVVA blog. An Outlet for new poems, drafts of poems and even rediscovered or reworked ones! For more poetry by Malcolm Evison see the Related Sites listing.
Saturday, May 16, 2009
BIRTH OF AN ALIEN
The following three poems (or three parts of one poem), still in draft form, are of necessity laid out consecutively; ideally (though impossibly) they should be read concurrently as each covers much the same period of the same individuals life. Autobiography is a new verse game for me but, I would appreciate any comments on the work so far.
BIRTH OF AN ALIEN
Part One - SHADOWS (Draft IIIA)
I was born -
unimaginably young -
to a backdrop of war
fought on a global scale.
Doodlebugs fledged their way
across the scene of my nativity -
I swear (a legacy
of wild imaginings)
I heard the engines stall
as death descended
plague-like
from the sky.
Childhood and youth
were spent
in the shadow
of a mushroom cloud –
as if by miracle
our lives went on.
Remaining unconvinced
by the ‘deterrence’ lie -
and guided by the light
of ‘Spies for Peace -
I joined the siege of bunkers -
which did not exist
according to
the parliamentary line –
where those that govern
could survive
improbable attacks.
Loophole acknowledged -
their reasoning must be
to strike pre-emptively
and I declined
the opportunity –
disowned all those prepared
for genocide, became
an alien in my own land.
Malcolm Evison
11 - 13 May 2009
BIRTH OF AN ALIEN
Part Two – LIGHT
Wrapped in a world full of love
whilst all around
was hate and fear -
(the enemy was thwarted
but not forgiven -
their future generations
would be tarnished
by the mark of Cain -
I failed to understand
that reasoning).
From my own comfort
rich in love
if not in pennies
I began to see
the world
through eyes
of others understanding -
took stands upon
my parents faith
reluctantly accepted
proscriptions
unknown to many
of my friends.
Sunday was decisively
the Lord's Day -
my father worked
being a preacher man -
my mother worked
looking after the family -
that was the day
I could not venture
out to play
with friends
whose parents
were otherwise
persuaded.
The radio was silent
save for the news
or hymn singing.
This was our Sabbath Day -
the would be sanctified
could only pray
for those proverbial sheep
so far astray -
it seemed
as if the second covenant
was made of rules
almost forgetting
the liberty of grace.
Malcolm Evison
14 May 2009
BIRTH OF AN ALIEN
Part Three – THE SCHOOL OF DOOM (Draft IIA)
A rebel prepared
for any cause
I traversed many
scenes but never found
my niche. I knew
from early teens
what I must be, but first
I must break free.
Eager to break the bonds
of school (a kind of punishment
for being young)
I dreamed my time away.
Moving from one school
to the next, never quite worked my way -
fell foul of alien traditions.
Compelled to join a company of snobs –
(a secondary punishment, once removed,
for my eleven-plus success) -
teachers just failed
to understand the differing curriculum
from one part of the country
to the next; dismissed me
as unworthy of attention
when I couldn’t understand
their different scheme of things.
They made me hooker
in their rugby union game,
when all I knew was soccer
not the queer toffs routine -
no-one attempted to explain
the rules and I became
a victim, kicked and ground
down. The previous absence
of a swimming pool
ensured I never learned to swim,
except against the tide -
they held me under
at the deeper end, then failed
to understand my trauma –
a baptism through drowning.
Loving to play with words
I soon lost patience
with the drill of prosody;
where words for me
had always throbbed with life,
they squeezed out their last breath
and bound them in a shroud
of grammar. Music
to me was singing,
but others in the class
had learned to read
a simple score -
the music man interpreted
attendance at a different school
as ignorance, my forte thwarted
by a different scale
of learning, and a tyrant’s whim.
And these were meant to be
the best years of one’s life?
Even school trips, had I been able
to partake, were way beyond
my parents means; in fifties Britain -
skiing had never been a part
of our lifestyle scheme,
not even part of any dream –
I made excuses, skulked
in the background
as if ashamed of being poor –
I never left these shores.
Malcolm Evison
15/16 May 2009
Friday, May 08, 2009
Windswept
the wind seizes the moment
turns tangents
scuds debris
through fresh accented
passageways
inertia becomes momentum
it takes
one’s breath away.
Malcolm Evison
08 May 2009
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
HER BOOK
Loose pages from time
collated and combined
to form a seal. ‘Fidelity’
italicized, illumined
on the manuscript –
an idol or ideal
once thought immutable.
Priestess enfleshed
as traditor, she stumbles
on her many tentacled
equivocation –
recalls the ritual
rending of the veil.
No longer able to maintain
her former love’s sectarian claim
she riffles through the pages
of her life. A few words
underlined, her youth transcribed
on parchment; genial memories
transformed into mysteries –
a facile binding
of a former liberty.
Malcolm Evison
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
SEMINARIAN
A sanctuary, this studied room –
a sacred place without divinity.
Here, he first began to scour
the weed-strewn paving of his mind –
thought-loads of words strove to devour
his piety.
The books, which thronged
his living space, provided sustenance –
a new found grace.
Alone,
a hermit walled in by abstractions,
striving to fill a god-shaped absence
with well-honed words.
Roomed in his study, studying his mind,
vacuity – that most tenacious weed –
has left him blind.
Malcolm Evison
Thursday, March 19, 2009
BEING
God spoke –
I dare not listen.
I could not face
the stillness
of simply being there.
God spoke:
there were no words –
I simply saw
the suffering of others.
I could not share
the stillness
of simply being there.
One day I knew
God could not speak -
I used my eyes,
I saw and felt
the suffering of multitudes –
I listened to their cries –
then cautiously I whispered
“I am here”
and from my helplessness
I knew -
that God was there.
Malcolm Evison
28 July 2005
Saturday, January 31, 2009
Aged Poet celebrates his Beloved
The poems read are: EMBRACE, TRANSFORMED and THAT DAY.
Friday, January 30, 2009
Reclamation
RECLAMATION
Just another
lightly throbbing
gritty grey day
a second chance
to modify one’s outlook
divert one’s gaze away
from the reality -
begin to play
the game
of life regained.
Malcolm Evison
29 January 2009
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Malcolm reads Five more Poems
The poems by Malcolm Evison are 'A Spun Illusion', 'Grey Day', 'Mist in Fell Country', 'Lines Beside The Garden Pond', 'Aubade' (sans le soleil)'.
Saturday, October 04, 2008
MIMI
MIMI
(aged 2 ½ years)
Wrapped in the warm fragrance
of the everyday
she moves mountains –
only to stumble
on the commonplace.
Complacency
so easily destroyed.
I try to capture it
with words, they writhe
relentlessly. She laughs
allows the world
to write
its affirmation.
Malcolm Evison
Thursday, August 07, 2008
Man For His Age
MAN FOR HIS AGE
Care-worn he leads
his guilt free life,
turns fears
into a bar-room joke –
he never fails
though sometimes falls
a victim to
“the changing times”.
Suburban heroes never weep,
they share with celluloid
an inability to bleed.
He veils his sorrows in
a sentimental song
and never sins –
his standards are complete
and up to date.
A true son
of a dying race.
Malcolm Evison
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Flutter By Moment
Flutter By Moment
it alights
softer than a whisper
on my sleeve
almost
as if it sought me out
I sit
relax
breathe in the gentle air -
the butterfly
spreads out its wings -
this moment
I am
at one
with nature
sharing the fragility
imagining
a place where all
could feel secure -
wearing
the butterfly
like a heart
on my sleeve
Malcolm Evison
17 July 2008




