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, January 14, 2012

BRIGHT





BRIGHT





blue sky

wisp streaked

with silver grey



the air is crisp -



the frost dressed lawn

crackles

beneath my feet



 







  Malcolm Evison

  14 January 2012


Monday, October 10, 2011

PROMISE



PROMISE





and nightfall brings
the promise of release
from daily toil



the neon skyline
shimmeringly bathes
the arena of desire



in technicolour majesty





Malcolm Evison 

a few nights ago - in the wee small hours - these lines emerged, shaped and reshaped themselves, as I lay in that hinterland between wakefulness and restlessness - I scribbled them down before trying to settle back to sleep and I've just rediscovered
the scribbled note







                                         

Sunday, September 11, 2011

SHATTERED

SHATTERED


he rails exhaustedly
against
the unrelenting night -

shattered
by restlessness
he groans

a welcome
to a new daybreak
prays that it's not

an uninvited dream -
still rails against
the unrelenting night

then collapses
into sleep


          Malcolm Evison
          10 September 2011

3.00am message to myself

not quite reclaimed
and hopefully
not pre-ordained

I float
or rather limpingly
falter

into that 'outcast' realm
which was the youthful
privilege of choice



                    Malcolm Evison

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Impromptu for Jack - A re-post for Fathers Day

IMPROMPTU FOR JACK


Not so much a moment
but all time,
the steady refrain

that “God is good”.
What is this thing called good?

Through all the pain
and all the joys
the theme remains –

a constant strain –

“I’ll praise my maker,
God is good”. No statements here,
a simple claim
from some deep tautological mine

“God is good”.
And now he’s home
with Him he served

the joy remains –

not for a moment
but for all time.
The universe proclaims

that God is good!


                         Malcolm Evison
                         June 2001

                     written for / about my father who died on my birthday in June 2001

Thursday, May 19, 2011

spaces of the free

spaces of the free



enter the spaces of the free
like tied and structured
sheer fall of the well



break bonds of liberty
and set the foot rest
shackles free
from their deformity -



the first noel is my
last heaven
Christ strewn across the soot hills
of the sky



the merry chants
of fiery spirits
sing for him
a lullaby -



wrapped in the sealed ears
of the ploughed and ground down
beasts of dismay



wilting and cooling
in the sun drenched
frost parched
desert of the city



fearing the feeling
felt of former fun
and city streets full of sun-
flowers that sparkle
like daisies
in the cool thighs
of the girls


                                                                      Malcolm Evison
                                                                           (1967?)

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Poem to Secular Jesus - (the seminarian replies)



a poem written in response to 'Seminarian', an earlier poem of mine,  as a result of a request from Rev Dr John Vincent whilst I was spending a post-graduate year at the Urban Theology Unit in mid 1970's


Poem to Secular Jesus





Absurd redemption of humanity -
how can I write
or mouth a ritual creed
which brings to life
such crass stupidity.

This problemed world provides
no sanctuary. The Word
screams out for light; a sacrifice

of dreams and power -

a hapless Saviour snared
by well-intentioned tomes.

Bookloads of words
can never penetrate
reality -

the God-shaped question
yearns
for my reply. No theory

supplies the key
to one who shuns
inherited divinity.

No core of righteousness
resides within -
the journey outwards
is where truth begins.



Malcolm Evison




Creative Commons License
This work is licenced under a Creative Commons Licence

























Tuesday, February 01, 2011

Restless Night


               Restless Night




frantic and static
collude
to break the spirit -

the chorussed scream
of roll and stretch
weaves counterpoint

against the searing ache
of stasis -
the chinese burn

of movement
resists
the planned escape



Malcolm Evison
30/01/11 – 01/02/11


Saturday, January 15, 2011

EMERGING



EMERGING


and this morning
still abed  
my legs
are mercury laden
knitted lead

the arms
folded or stretched  
scream out
for postures new


Malcolm Evison
15/01/11

Monday, December 13, 2010

Listening To Mahler [ A response in six movements]

LISTENING TO MAHLER
[A Response in Six Movements]


1



Have I lost the need

to weep



the power and the beauty

the freedom and the fire

tremble through my body.



The beauty – the beauty

the beauty and the power

tremble through my mind –



heavy with joy I want

to weep –

drunk with longing I need

the tears to weep

at the tragic and majestic

power – the power and the beauty.



Beauty, power, tragedy and fear –

and I can’t weep.



Have I lost

the power to weep –

the beauty, such beauty and

such power.








2



relax

a little

gently, slowly, rest –

now waiting, urging on the day

grasping

each nuance as it comes.



Slowly burning

through the air –

my song

resounding in the sea

gently, lyrically

and then

I start to skip-a-long, to dance,

dance arminarm around the earth

and then start dreaming.



Lushly sliding, skipping and prancing

struck dumb

for a moment

succumb again

to the power,

the tragic happiness of knowing

of being and living

enslaved

by the melodies of life

free and captive to her whims.



Free and beautifully gliding

living and alive.













3



moving, singing

dancing and laughing

cutting sharply

all springtime and in love.



In love and diving

deeper diving – driving lower

then exalted / and softly degraded

and next I’m snarling

at my fears.



And violently into the present time

I’m tossed, active being

to and fro-ing as the cancer

spreads

and bursts

into a shower of crystal.



My ears hesitate behind

my eyes – my mind is dreaming –

and I am sharing your pain

and your pleasure

living within you, viewing wider

horizons

sharing my body and mind

with you; with all

born out of the grass and trees –

as each new thought becomes

a world, and each new world

is me.













4



the words of two minds

and a thousand ears, become

those of one world.

Words of belief, of faith and trust –

songs of the children

unborn and dying,

accepting their deaths

with dignity

living their lives



with pleasure and ease.

Delights of the dream arouse

their desires – a sombre pleasure

a woeful joy. The need for love

as strong as I need tears –

weaving the largest into the smallest

weaving past greatness

into the hearts of children.



And this laborious mission

has a goal of joy – your eyes are smiling

now

and in their reflection

I see my life.





5



Gloriously the birth and mirth

of Christ, who lived a hero – died a man.

The innocent know far more understanding

than the callous heart –

their voices echo and thunder

from a mountain stream into

a waterfall.



Cutting through the hills and trees

carving the tree

into the shape of man –

until the wood takes its revenge.



And in the days of youth,

which is our life – there comes a reckoning



the tingle and the bitter fruit

of age



still

we rejoice.





6



Body and mind alone can never make

a man –

as we walk

through the valley

of tranquil thoughts, the beauty

pressures us

to face the truth –

each step discovering

the jungle and the pit, each life day

drinking from the streams

pausing a while and kneeling down

to praise the men who made

us what we are –

and God who we created

gave us life, as it floats sweetly from

the wounded side

of Christ.



Casting aside the altars, so every man

woman and child

may wear the ring of wedlock

in their soul.



Calmly I retrace my steps

and see my faults,

back to the garden – sit down

in the fioelds and sigh for the sun.

throw wide your arms and thighs,

embrace the living – forget the dead

who readily received their joys,

who gave us life and pleasure.



I need to weep no more – I sit

just sit and listen

listen to the open spaces.





Malcolm Evison