Tuesday, 28 May 2013

ISSUE: 2

Neon Highway ISSN 1476-9867


Issue 2



September 2002
























Contents:





David Grubb: two poems: 1/2



A C Evans: three poems/three images: 3/4/5/6



Ken Edwards: poem: 7/8/9



Robert Sheppard: poem: 9-15



Mark Mendoza: poem: 15/16/17



Helen Berry: two poems: 17-22



David Clemson: poem: 22-23



Rupert Loydell: two poems: 23-26



Adrian Clarke: poems: 26/27



Jas Maddock: poem/image: 28/29/30



Alice Lenkiewicz: poem/image: 30/31



Sheila Murphy: poems: 32



Trevor Landers: poem: 33/34



Jim Bennet: poems: 34-36



Matt Fallaize: poem: 36-38



Bill Griffiths: poems: 38-42









Cover image by Jas Maddock



With special thanks to Ken Edwards and Bill Griffiths for contributing towards this issue.





Copyright is retained by the authors







David Grubb





Learning to Fly



My children fall out of the wall into dreams

where flying is the first thing you do. They already

know that this is not possible when we are around. They

also know that some of the animals cannot be mentioned

or it leads to questions, frowns, disbelief and even harm.

In church they see saints doing the fantastic and beasts

wandering between miracles and battles and all the animals

fall down in front of St. Francis when he commands them.

The nearest we get to this is in stories of walls that go for

a walk and zoos where the people are in cages and when the sun

and moon speak in sonata-form. Ballet also gets near to it

but when the adults try too hard you get bad sculpture

and long poems and operas where the small bellowing heads

of ugly females fog-horn rapture above mossy bosoms

and the sight of unicorns makes some of the men cross their legs.







































1











OTHER



And when he had hurled himself at the mirror

in an attempt to discover other

we found his two shoes beneath the mirror frame

placed as if he had just exchanged them for boots

and had walked out into the wilds of Dartmoor

to be with the singing stones and the women turned into

trees and the places where children would sometimes be heard singing

and in the letters he had left all of the words had become

birds and his books stank of berries and old orchards.

This being a dream of course so that we may believe

in it. This being a fable so that we can refer to it

and not let the silence hide it, giving his two shoes

to the Oxfam shop, his letter to the zoo and his books

hurled into the compost bin until they were quiet.

This being what we stuff between the prayers and the

orthodoxies and what we wish our children to discover

after the singing detectives have been and made

comments about the size of the mirror, big enough

to swallow a man whole if the truth were told.





























2













A.C. Evans



IN EXTREMIS







In my suffering

I looked out of the window



Far blue evening sky of clouds

Lit from below; a flashing, red light

From an aircraft overhead-the scene

Reflects my mind, or

The images in my mind,

Arising- how?

















3







In extremis, I feel convulsions

Taking my singular presence

Beyond, or among, the clouds above.

So-in this uncertain space where

A cold, burning mist shrouds

The remains of ancient buildings

Abandoned carcasses scattered

Across scrubland hillside, rising to a

Monumental crown of stones

Standing motionless in time,

I see that I am dying-slowly,

And in pain.





I also see, with another sense,

A white, slender figure approaching.

Perhaps we can talk,

Is it possible

That, without words, there is, at last,

An answer?

But no-I hesitate-and

Quietly, the figure passes into shadow.

Everything fades slowly from my sight

As, without a sound, I drift

Into oblivion-into darkness.

































4





WAITING HERE



Images of star death.

Polished flooring, waiting,

I’m waiting - jazz music – impressions,

Mistaken impressions – Elektra, still

Waiting, child’s voice, silhouette,

Figures – plate glass vistas-all

Around me, while I wait, here,

Still-and outside the hothouse,

Not my time, light-bird waiting

Here sleepmask cool, the sky

Reflected-no, I am…waiting













5





LOOP DECAY





1. Dawning Sickness

Legend-time-love-remorse

Endless-loop-loop decay

Endgame-future-memorial-hope

Deny-time-love-decay





2. Death Inventory

Comprehension tonal-trial-black

Ignorance-ecstasy-life-decay

Help-smile-deny-endless loop

Legend – endgame – time-decay





3. Loop Alarm

Away-thought-remains-remorse

Help-time-legend-decay

Save-deny-alarm-loop

Endless-future-love-decay





4. Picturesque Concordance

Dust – ecstasy – mem-orial – hope

Past – l e g e n d – decay

Sa…ve…(deny – alarm – lo-

-op – t I m e – remain – fall…ing – d e c a y





5. Sick Decay

Unkn-ow-n…) remain – hope – endless

Loop – loop – d e c a y…ing

…unknown…u n k n o w…n…///

]legend – love – re-mor-se-









6









Ken Edwards



Four poems from Eight+ Six (from a much longer sequence consisting of 98 poems due to be published as a book)









THEY DIDN’T GO HOME





The poets and their entourages, appendages,

Readerships, theoretical props and absences

Are variously and severally assembled.

A shows pictures and reads the words.

B takes seriously the notations in cowboy comic balloons

C vacillates, and comes down on the side of externality

D demonstrates conviviality (again).

E emphasises the smallness of the audience.

F is quiet and has with him a pair of roller blades

G, as usual, enigmatic.

H waxes shaven.

I have had my hair newly cut but have forgotten about it.

Sound travels from the street below because it is a warm

Night & there is no reason for folks to go home.





THE POETS GATHER

(Theory of poetry 2)





The poets gather. They, like poetry itself,

want to be, not seem. Which is seemly.

These are their stories, and the summation

of them is this: that they reject story.

Why, they are paralytic with joy: on their plastic chairs

they identify the depth of field of such paradoxes

and exult in it – they presuppose no need





for emotional closure.

That was then. And now?

Well, only you & I are left, and we’re engaged

In refutation. Yours is a pint of bitter,

mine’s a Guinness. This proposition is true. We raise

our glasses, we refute it

and refute again.







SHIFTS GENRE OFTEN





The poet is one who commits

acts of barbarism out of

social urgency. She babbles

and is a rejection of the

language of. She keeps the context

problematic, pivots as often

as possible, which permits

the tide. This is kind of lingo

phrase for those sorts of people lost

in “the water of the river”

when the water is the river.

Its maps are metamorphic not

atemporal, a comedy of

metonymic chains, of logics









*For Lyn Hejinian, some of whose presentation in the King’s Talks series, King’s College London, April 1998, I have paraphrased freely here.







BECOME GEMS HERE



The map has got scrambled & we are all

delighted. My foot is ambiguous, it has

locationality but not

positionality. Don’t stop. “Those useful choreographies

can easily become a baleful aerobic”* and

once the stultifiers have a hex on warp agencies

who knows where it’ll end up?

But I am certain of a noble uncertainty, it’s OK



now I see that you in your way

radiate and this is legal & good

And everyone says you got the look

of the artist formerly known as god.

We are conversant with our glorious plangent mess

gazing rapidly past this which into here



• The quotation is attributed to Chris Cheek in New Hampshire, September 1996









-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------











31 Basalt Wind-chimes for the Window-Box of Earthly Pleasures







The End of the Twentieth Century 2

Implosive Samples 2

Human Dust 5

Twentieth Century Blues 64





O







Not a book of ayres not a solid monotone. An eye. An ear. Willed to pleasure, let's take a note for a walk across the humming strings. Human



O





Human dust on which history overdosed twice (at least) in one century



O







This dance means bumping into things, yet jump back from the path of Creation's clockwork





O





Atheism does not exist because god invented it! A force to vent: Velopoesis



O





A single voice on a single page - there's music enough. The newspaper vendor cries: ‘Echo ... Echo



O





Plonk (see plunk); his rush of pleasure haunts the paths of sense with sensation



O





But that spooky charm is not earthly goodness as one would want to know it!



O





The fat, melting, dissipates more energy than it conserves. As does repeating the spiky line that unravels into a force larger than its parts



O





‘There ain't no way they can replace this vacuum I created in human history



O





The discipline of hazard and high quality shoots aloft the victims' pitiable admiration that builds under the crust of pain while Creation adjusts its ancient braces



O





The Author of Bangs, against which we nuzzle the footnote of something like human justice. If he is condemned to time, push the eye out and climb out, as from a shell into the bright dream of tomorrow. Obtain your liberty and fiery scope, a phoenix of ‘Socio-Pleasurableness’!



O





Routes bloomed across bound wastes: up to off and over and out until they feel like jelly: ‘Your faire lookes enflame



O





A sensation that is almost an emotion an aubade an algorithmic simulation



O





(a vacuum



O





Suck parody? Constituents of pleasure are not to be taken for granted



O





(sings:) Dear, if you change, I'll melt away like lard!



O





Jaunty now, where the lyrics are dainty. Its opposite, in semantic counterpoint, a miraculous parliament!



O





Keep Creation dramatic and didactic, that's the trick! Each single eye is plugged tight with transformations



O





The strange persistence of the meanings of certain words through centuries. Which syllable shall we elongate to quench again with love?



O





The right to pleasure, as under statute. A unit of pleasure, its animus (Who needs devils with gods like that?



O





Born again, to free Poetic Fury? Dust caught in bees' wax. Turn your lamp up in unbelief. Pleasure has no balance



O





to catch the almost-involuntary spurt of semen or the spiritualist who contacted Bradlaugh after death to catch his confession! Weightless epiphanies



O





‘Shine him off that window!’ This goes with saying



O





Who said purity wove their words, advertising just one admired synthesis?



O





Has an oath truer currency for being underwritten by fear and by stone-eyed defenders of monuments? Cease to be pleasuring response is lost until it sings far from a said



O





Shifting rime that easie flatterer a cat chasing a fly



O





Pleasure's twin. Standing by his word, a god of flesh she forms



O





Clocking form, the infectious eye catches pleasure being caused. The unhasty song when responsibility descants as response



O





The sigh of a cosmos, cooling, expanding; the resurrection of an idea of the word as



O





Unseal the lid at last! A chamber of twentieth century echoes rings. Soiled prose-songs of Velopolis











June 1999







Robert Sheppard

































-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------









Mark Mendoza





fringe saddles





unsaturated

student disaster oils rated/reacted

from the smeared throne exchange heat

system freezers firmly- the compost

surface scrolled fingers reduce & protract the pie

induction in this matter unusually absent



investiture harbours

herbivore grades blest

professions or social shorts

profoundly refunded



tune general tardy

demand smoke

function pull off



with traveller’s joy/ a child of 7 years needs

testa splits) to bury for nothing:

46firsts.com

place & appliance a-

greed with the employer

in funding the deep fringe saddles as follows:



1) production of the Basidium Nexus Plan (BNP)

2) deamination of isolate force-pump & graft

3) storage of cupped garden soil will do- essence

of yellow torch; &

4) regulation of the chromolume in plundering



equation of the last

items ad valorem advert expenditure

whereabouts & come smaller

assigned a fiscal place in a tokonoma rivulets

& droplets react



without throat rate

looking like homozygous

or vestigial wings war

on worthwhile



wear on any cut godwottery

not yet raised to a yodel

multiple asset tubers

& polythene side-lines sovereign clap



largely backward or handicapped for the secular

chambr´e at the momentary canal they turn

thyme-eaters to credit

“dust yourself off there

let alphas decide weather a headlong stop-gap

or warped flax engine will cross inert phenotype

suicide in the same

ludic counters to a prejudice

chin up” you can wig out

if you wag trails





-----------------------------------------------------------



Helen Berry









THE TASTE OF THE ONION





OUR nation is at WAR



OUR ECONOMY is in RECESSION



The civilised world F

A

C

E

S UNPRECEDENTED DANGERS



YET



THE STATE OF OUR UNION



HAS NEVER BEEN STRONGER



OUR NATION HAS



CAPTURED



ARRESTED



AND RID



THE WORLD OF THOUSANDS



OF TERRORISTS



SAVED A PEOPLE



FROM STARVATION



FREED A COUNTRY



FROM BRUTAL OPPRESSION



A $$$ BILLION DOLLARS $$$ A MONTH





TODAY * * * *

WOMEN * * * *

ARE * * *

FREE





OUR PROGRESS IS A TRIBUTE TO THE



MIGHT



OF



THE UNITED STATES MILITARY







(THEY) HAVE DELIVERED



A MESSAGE





YOU WILL NOT ESCAPE



THE JUSTICE



OF THIS NATION



SEMPER FI MY LOVE



OUR CAUSE IS JUST



TENS OF THOUSANDS



OF



DANGEROUS KILLERS



SCHOOLED



IN THE METHODS



OF

MURDER



THE MEN AND

WOMEN





OF



OUR



ARMED FORCES



SPREAD

THROUGHOUT

THE WORLD



LIKE



TICKING



TIME BOMBS

SET

TO GO

OFF



WITHOUT

WARNING



AMERICA IS ACTING



AMERICA AND AFGHANISTAN ARE NOW ALLIES









LET’S PASS A STIMULUS PACKAGE













Girl from Ipanema



Carnival carnivore casting worms

Jewelled watch, sleek chic bait

A gluttonous feast of flesh

pretty,

preened

and primed await



Metre high plumes on glittering crowns

Fandango frippery

Fringing flickery

Hormones transported in

sweaty rivulets

Amazon rivers coursing



Maraca beads

swirling white noise

Tom-tom pacing

pelvic thrust

Native rhythms evoke

lustful swelling

Wave pulses to the edge

Hairs twitch





In-breath

held

waiting



Heartbeat re-sounds

throb

Crescendo approaches

Pace quickens

Pupils dilate

Flesh judders

Globs trickling over

glistening skin

pulled

translucent



Precocious gutter child

re-turned

Chicken bones

line

the Street









--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





David Clemson





Before reconstruction



Horsetails whipped by the hot wind

as the crocodiles scrape their scales

against the dead oaks

blistered by the Sun

desiccated statues of forgotten shade.

Brown-eyed deer flicker

through the tall golden grasses

laden with fat ticks,

scenting the water,

fearing to drink

under the lion’s, snarl

over the dead lambs.

While pink, grey and green

lampreys suck the life from

the great salmon as they

lie in the gravid beds.

All must come to this course?

This Eden where the key

is jammed in the lock.

Overwound climate?

Broken Spring?





-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Rupert Loydell





HOUSE OF GLOOM



I flew home each night from wherever I had been

To watch my father die, slept on the floor beside him.



Colours bleached out while I was away, everything

turned to brown: ochre, tawny, mustard, spice.



Death continued about its secret business;

no-one ever spoke about what was going on.



Stumps of bushes are sending up shoots,

Often in the form of prophecy or story.



No-one listens. I am somewhere else by now,

at a standstill. Waiting for Dad to arrive.



I must stop turning to see if he is following,

must learn to speak in the past tense.



Only the hardiest can stand the present;

I do not understand the word memory.



At the bottom of my heart it is proven:

melancholy makes everything right.



Turn on the light and play music til daybreak;

Loss must be burnt into the world.



My father is now cross-referenced,

a man no longer in the public domain.



‘Don’t pull that innocent routine on me’

is something he once might have said.



I twitch and fidget, pace the field;

he zips and flickers through the world.







River of Breath



Already, I know

some of my clothes

will outlast me;



and that there won’t

be time to read my books

or hear my CDs again.



Past and future

stretch tight between

loss and promise,



an intersection

where topography

becomes narrative:



a dangerous turn,

hills, bridges, towers,

an underpass



all possible routes

through the woods

to where clear skies



and rivers wait.

We have drifted away

from the moment…



I wish for nothing

to change, should

probably worry more



as ambition slips

out of sight. Time

is not my property,



the end of the work

is in view. I snuggle

into a tent of words.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Adrian Clarke

from Skeleton Sonnets



the age

of what

to input

profiles idem

a fleur

not inflated

full face

in your

one step

from the

edge pretty

as a

puncture’s high

pitched collapse







“Who will ever read these slips…?”

Li ho (trans J.D. Frodsham)





tips windswept

neglect stirs

a flicker

within silk

sheathed speckling

leaves illegible

pits beetle

drilled piecemeal

deliver the

insinuative image

scenting drizzle

spirits twitter

a relict

bled script



















Jas G. Maddock















I USED TO FEEL INTENSE IN MY DEFENCE OF MY DIFFERENCE- NOW I’M COMPLETELY INDIFFERENT. A study of dreams…



I met two floral decked boys on the way to nowhere

They greeted me with a bow and a shower of fragrance

Shrank to the size of small and crept inside my eyes

Stayed there beautiful and danced until I died



If you look closely at things far off you mistake them

Splendorous pretty youths bedecked in dazzled flowers

Asters, camilias, dahlias, passiflora purple divinity boys

Then as they draw nearer the magic sours



Rotten carcass pickled sickly malicious men and women

Smell of burnt flesh and goats, dressed in the same coats



All humans are covered in boring skin and inside are boring bones

Corpuscles, muscles, kidneys: heartless marauding drones.



I believe in nothing, I live out my lifeless days dazed

But a tiny pinhole of a crack screams out inside of me

Not very loud of course, cracks cannot shout very loud

That I must carry on drained, pained and maimed emotionally.



I dream of bees, of wasps with cigarettes in their arses

In pink lipstick rooms with strange men by white windows

I dream of mazes and of running feared I feel the beads of sweat

Palpitating excruciating; the scare from which I froze



I see men with teeth like waylaid graveyard tombstones charred

Walking silent; prowling, the growling; it might be their empty stomach

But they might just growl as that’s what weird men are supposed to do

To scare young maidens and princes and leave them wary and flummoxed.





I hear my name called over the waves of the sea by the beach

Echoing, dancing over the fresh, white, salty foaming milk

The mermaids and men protect me from the human scurf

Pox-like and wormy they spread disaster from old age to birth





The birds talk their bird language all full of mystery and riddle

Provide a kind of company and punctuate the silent nothing

I listen and strain to make sense of the twittery flittery

But after a while it gets me feeling a bit jittery.



I block out the sounds of the past in my present head

Threatening to take me over and pull me fully back into pain

I think of golden boys, winged and fragrant with dark hair

They fight to banish the morbid memories, of more I will gain





-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Alice Lenkiewicz



















milieu







now she’s back again

inside the illusion

preferred this time

maybe you should persuade me

that insects fly

all i see is the earth move in waves



when this is over

will you consider me or

will it change



something vacant



blue glass blue snow

something perhaps

another random ricochet



…so we lit some cigarettes





kissed

despised each other

laughed

walked our separate ways

in-between artificial displays

of glass fish



transparent gaping heads

one or two reflections



i gave the visitor directions

yes over there

then watched her search her bag

as they played that song

… thought I was someone good



she still couldn’t find what she was

looking for

put her hand over her mouth









31

Sheila Murphy





Aggravated Asphalt





Time and against the granular induction chevrons placed their amber laves where

Chipped rock seemed intact. For all practical precipice, there seemed a comely

Avenue to fake. Tensions modestly enveloped see-through evanescence. Mainly

From the spun confronting shack presiding near the temples. Brains [dry] before

Beauty. Age is the retort by vitamins, the lock of pear, the whole meal caveats that

Lank into comportment. The coronary altar cloth ′eclairs that any mandible will

Do. Maintained by birds of prey still skivvy although posthumous. That might fray

Semblances before the bake themselves into a twist. This rightly shakes the

Veered foundations into mountable renewals. Plagues come back to haunt what

They have taunted once. And then the sway, the showplace and the cult.



Pronouncing the death sentence in a nice way, the surface as altimeter











Nary a Ration





She kept using the word natural. I was very tired. The afternoon seemed to have

Shelved energy that might have been within the spigot and eventually fallen into

Use. I could not hear the altar in her humdrum range of motion. Tentacles were

Aching to give back to Morse Code tincture of a ravishing and soon-to-be

Announced young fact. The mercy of this wish waltz was its semblance to the

Known. A welding class would have fortified. Likewise, a modest sum of clash.

The penury in which her limbs were steeped made soak time seem inanimate.

Then the worry of the free, the timber out in back, the mere thought of a coast.

These intrepid shoulder-length reflections on a dish of vindaloo were nearly posh

Compared with petty actuals that graced the nearby boulders. All one would have

Wanted was surprise to be indicative of rest. But this seemed creviced with

Invasion. While telling the tale, one reminisces brilliantly until the headrest won’t

Include the dromedary motion sickness one considers as an antidote to a learned

Severity.









Roan latitude, a vague sense of the nest alongside promises





Trevor Landers





House on Oeo Road





Paint runs from cracks in the ceiling

as if the room were wounded –

This body, and we inside.

perhaps it is running

from a spear-pierce into our own

visional vision.





Where words and burgeoning

shapes fail

The birth of painting is reflected

From color above the ceiling.





the black backing shows through

where a mirror has been partly shattered –

scalloped edges of glass fallen away,

so that there is a central

sculptural night

surrounded by the day lit

reflection of trees

that sway

at the edge of the anxious mind.





In fine heat

two images flash,

one into the other:



a ceiling of painted stars, pale-blue fluorescence

and an unkempt lawn,

glistening

from a recent rain.



By the curve of the earth

night’s depth is amplified

as from the sill

of a bay window from the house, on Oeo Road.







-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Jim Bennet





City of Culture



start on bricks

add the people - the I who have



then I who have nothing

there is something

see if a people see

looking for a city's strength

looking good

trivialised

because trivialise is in the viewpoint

see the city of us



Liverpool



we work writing

human for ourselves

and of pieces a side of a face

a face of subsistence

of where the desperate

bring misery



so you mostly take on

the form of squalor

shut sad as if ashamed



Liverpool while first aside

accept reflection

a struggle in diversity



raise another state

at stake the state

that inhabits kindly

but I and us have

no direction home

lost because

people lost hope

turn don't position

don't do snapshots

one shot failure

write of the problems



the homeless

protect people

create underclass

what is not should be

the Liverpool that is





who writes of the system

and worth of city

cries for Liverpool

everyone from people

drug foisted everywhere



history induced

and who is history

it's crap money but it happens

need your eyes and everywhere

talking only of architecture

banks own the wit



we have been the way of poverty

suffering people

living think say

what this picture is



Liverpool

city of culture



__________________________________







when the cold wind blows



there are places we go

in the southern end of town

where decaying ships

rust out a wasteland

we walk back alleys

the weather against us

hands with woollen socks for gloves

coat collar turned against the wind

this is the reality

the crackling

ark cutting

weld flashing night

and here we rut

bum fuck the future

and cry sometimes



yes cry

when cold winds blow







-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------









Matt Fallaize







Ad-Ban







Took the colours emphasised, looking changes

into the mathematician, invariant climbs eight

to the schemers, where, believing sunlight made

separate perception dream burning myself.



Beneath next, a gate, hinged white singularity,

a quicksilver should, better surround the

objectification, smothering the improvisation.

The super-structure examined, type fixed.



Clarity sighs into realising peripheral, glanced, indefinite euphony

until analytic dropped, shifted, lowered, pushed

over reflex record.



Recollection: lying in a eucalyptus, the gravity opposes the lot.

Water to our walkway, scattered sonata co-operatively subsiding.



The trumpet rolls

hits

and one wall blows. Rush the damage.

Your black fingers roll temporal air and the

force felt increases. The shared hole,

the switch.

37

Two, three, carry two. Face dancing visitors, see

the stationary shadows, under a field

calls out, exhausted. The untimed unified uses

signify filling, exhaling in the between so hurts.



Balcony shatters, erupted windows. A walkway

where fire, the fact, came. We wanted retrenching, the open

through telephone-cross. Listen. Wings before resistance

the functions fraught without possible

following drops and background, in noting glass colour.

Broke, the congruent roof. Bird wood. Silence. Haywire.



Began once, precise the start. I,

knowing, upright

just steel, run the directions, the market,

incapable curve, jerk. From notions before

Perfect you. The shoulder circular, just

passing your moving: poetry.

It takes it’s surprises, it takes changing a rebound

labelled “unattended”, marked “decay”. The eye

with a shouting someone calls physically, the walkway

with tearing, the energy of the distance.

Silence, a doubt passes, regarding discarded zero



Sighs in his page, eyes vigorously drawn. The crossing,

knowing anger. Momentarily in blazes, his bright sirens

in the inescapable reflections call the dust.

The utility sends winter to the alternations on the imagined,

realised sword, and the price.



Dancing down in turning digits, a Fireman in

unliquidated blank-screened yesterday necessity.

To the weather, and a history.



Lovely light, the sky strictly duplexed

with the freedom, measured down their wheels.

A torch, light circumvents description. My

time in each moment marks still potent, unbroken. But you

become another arrangement. I, my uneven changes moves

it selectively. Self-love flattered a new folded past, sprays the

pepper- my pillow perception.



The notes are gone. Clean the sign. Beware the distance.

Accompanied sighs secretes cloves. My somersault flurry

hit the city, opens on where it’s hesitant sound launch, say

our distance was copied. Value for reality, simply the



disturbing violins. Watch, fixed, the cordon from distance.

I, outside. One desire, with glass.







-----------------------------------------------------------------------------





Bill Griffiths



BEE-BIKE





For unto us

we are sluggish

in honey-diesel

a chamber a six-facet fruit-transparent



SLIF SLIF SLIF



beat and a

BUMB BUMB BUMB



finding we are unemployed again



slif at a shiny rim of wax

float

booling boon and hint

no Royce no north no land-fill



extra-ordinary

revolve

and but a tiny tube of living contact for passage



pleases like low-apple syrup

rods of flavour

shook to lemon dust

slight sips fat-water

in fret-strut



solid burgher

but glow-in-home a lamp

of wings

and will we see Mother?



the wall

of slow soapstone

rice-glum hinting light

what these mysterious barricades

I eat



I emancipate



wing-leg

arm-head

leached in the rain

of loose liquid food our

first bath



or

euphoric

deep-root

plum

a-rotted snort pip



a fellow hum

to preen

crawl explore

foot each-over

the melody today is ‘Dargomel’



the chant

a tumbled walk

for we are to pay our respects



and the Queen



roseate and bile

love-fur fire channel of



mill of the loving she-workers

and we too shine



gold and global



rasp-castle rigs

on leg

a rude mark

we wake to

as prussic glamour



stripe



a grow, crèche

glow to growl



they shake

sting









SPIDER MAN



long

bus-stop



man maybe



shiny as new



only the dull plaques

sockets

if you glance, catch a glance

stands perch-rigid



preternatural thin, long



still-stannary pipe-crunch clamp-hog-teeth

hidden



How!



After a familiar while,

an elegant leg

seems to almost shuffle

a beginning of a little dance

(I do not know what---

Galliard? Bootlegger Shimmy? Country Jig?)

lop-sided



A terrific burst

Rustle and rush up to,

tear away from

bald beserk aggression against a nearby sky-wall

up and up

we say, “Oh no! he’ll fall!”



But slapstick-stylish

then he rives his shirt open

and SPINS



something to web him to safety



that gluey confusion of middle

(waving, behaving, saving)



all because of the bus

well, we run



well, he knows

Spider-woman is inside



acrid

svelt

snaky-necked



she rides



and her neat bundles beside her

























Publications





Ken Edwards: Poems published here are from a forthcoming collection: Eight + Six



Sheila E. Murphy: Most recent book-length collection is from Stride Press, titled THE STUTTERING OF WINGS (2002).



AC. Evans: Forthcoming collection of poems from Via Dolorosa Press.



Cory Harding: memories of air: Collection of poems and images.



Robert Sheppard; Patricia Farrell: The Blickensderfer Punch: Ship of Fools 2002

Fucking Time; six songs for the Earl of Rochester: Ship of Fools



Robert Sheppard: the necessity of poetics: ship of fools, Liverpool, 2002







Journals



The Radiator: a journal of contemporary poetics. Editor. Scott Thurston.



Oasis: Edited by Ian Robinson and Yann Lovelock.



The Paper: Editor: David Kennedy.



The Journal: Editor: Sam Smith.









Gallery: COLLECT in Liverpool

Art Exhibitions

49, Lark Lane, Liverpool.

http://home.btconnect.com/collectgallery



















43





Contributors



Sheila E. Murphy’s most recent book-length collection is from Stride Press, titled THE STUTTERING OF WINGS (2002). Murphy’s work appears widely in literary presses. Her home is in Phoenix, Arizona, where she and Beverly Carver founded and coordinated the Scottsdale Center for the Arts Poetry Series for twelve years.



Robert Sheppard has now completed his long project Twentieth Century Blues. The most recent parts published were Empty Diaries, Stride, 1998, and The End of the Twentieth Century, Ship of Fools, 2002. Senior Lecturer in Writing and English at Edge Hill College of Higher Education, he has also published widely on contemporary poetry and on the discourse of poetics.



Ken Edwards was born in 1950 and lives in London, where he works

as a journalist. He is currently editorial director of Reality Street Editions. His own publications include: Intensive Care (1986), Good Science (1992), 3,600 Weekends (1993) (collections of poetry); Futures (1998) (novel). The poems published here are from a forthcoming collection: Eight + Six.



David H W Grubb. B. 1941. Poems and prose published in UK, USA and Austria. THE MEMORY OF ROOMS (new & selected) published by STRIDE last year. New collection due in 2003 as well as a novel.



Helen Berry: Has worked as a systems engineer and business analyst. Currently on the MA Writing course at Edge Hill University College. Interested in Drama and Poetry.



Matt Fallaize: Lives, works and writes in Ormskirk, Lancashire. An MA graduate, he is a member of the Poetry and Poetics research group at Edge Hill University College, where he is in constant fear of being found out for the chancer that he clearly is.



Alice Lenkiewicz: Artist/Poet. Brought up in Plymouth. Presently lives in Skelmersdale where she is studying her MA in Writing Studies and editing Neon Highway. Published in Fire and Smoke.



Mark Mendoza celebrated his twenty-second birthday with a one-man Mariachi band in a cactus garden close to Brighton and Hove. He is currently writing the critical autobiography Finder’s Keepers: The Life and Work of Aaron ‘The Animal’ Gill. Network information and material

containing the words ‘host’ and ‘explosive’ may be forwarded to markmendoza64@hotmail.com.





Jasmine G Maddock: A surreal, imaginative and quirky artist/writer. Graduated in 1996 from John Moores University in Literature. Has undertaken a cornucopia of art/poetic work, including work selected for unesco. it (poetry) in 2001, poetry in ‘Twisted Shadows’, out now from ‘Spotlight Poets’, winning the society of All Artists (SAA) 2000 Experimental Professional section with ‘Manwoman’ and work on www.absolutearts.com/portfolios/j/jasmine.



Trevor Landers is a Lecturer in Communication at The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand. Trevor’s recent publications are in Never Bury Poetry, Poetic Hours, Pierian Springs and The Voice of the Turtle. He is currently reading the lesser known books of the French surrealist author, George Bataille, and intends to write an academic paper on them.

Jim Bennett is a writer, poet and lecturer, who is married with six children and living in Merseyside (UK). He has over forty books published, covering many subjects including, transport studies, marketing and poetry. He is a lecturer at the University of Liverpool where he delivers courses on such diverse subjects as, travel writing, science fiction, journalism, and other aspects of creative writing.

Down in Liverpool. A new CD of Music and Poetry from. Jim Bennett. "an authentic voice bringing the sound of beat to Liverpool" http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Academy/1127/

David Clemson was a teacher and University lecturer in mathematics, science and education. He now makes his living from writing mathematics and science books. All of his previous experience and qualifications have been in mathematics and science. David is now taking the MA in Writing Studies at Edge Hill and having the most exciting time discovering new things about himself.

Rupert M. Loydell’s writing has appeared in hundreds of magazines in the UK, Europe and America; in many anthologies; and in several solo collections. New work was recently commissioned by the Bath Literature Festival, Devon Arts In Schools Initiative (DAISI) and by Exeter Health Care Arts. Rupert Loydell is Managing Editor of Stride Publications, which he founded in 1982. He also edits the associated Stride magazine-now an online journal at www.stridemagazine.co.uk



Adrian Clarke’s collections include “Ghost Measures” (Actual size, 1987), and “Obscure Disasters”, “Millennial Shades & Three Papers” and “Paradise Gardens” (all Writers Forum). Work anthologised in “verbi visi voco” (Writers Forum, 1992) and “foil” (Etruscan Books, 2000). He co-edited four issues of “Angel Exhaust” during its two incarnations, and “Floating Capital:new poets from London” (Potes & Poets Press, 1991) with Robert Sheppard. He currently edits “And” with Bob Cobbing.



A.C. Evans

Born in Hampton Court in 1949, A.C Evans lived in South London until 1963 when he moved to Essex. Moving back to London in 1973, he currently lives in Mortlake, near Richmond. His artistic activities include both poetry and visual art. His drawings, collages, reviews, articles, translations, poetry and poetic fictions have appeared in numerous magazines including Stride, Fire, Fisheye, Cold Print, Memes, Penny Dreadful, Angel Exhaust and Terrible Work.



Bill Griffiths



Bill Griffiths, born Middlesex 1948, now living in Seaham, Co.Durham. Mixed career, from odd jobs to poetry publishing to studying Old English to (currently) dialect research with the Centre for Northern Studies, Northumbria University. Poetry first published in Poetry Review, 1972 (when edited by Eric Mottram) and subsequently booklets from Writers Forum (Bob Cobbing) and many other little presses. Recent publications: A book of spilt cities (Etruscan Books), Ushabtis (Talus Editions), Durham & other sequences (West House Books).













NEON HIGHWAY. POETRY / ART MAGAZINE

Neon Highway publishes, poetry, poetics, art, reviews and letters.



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