Issue 32: Ian Seed

The Jugglers

 

1

You walk down stone steps into a crowded square.

No-one turns at your approach. They stand in small groups,

chatting, laughing, waiting for a performance about to take place.

It turns out to be only a set of jugglers who throw their pins

over the nothingness of our lives, maiming the air with their cries. 

 

2

The tricks they showed us looked cheap and flashy,

but they could be life-changing, we were told, if only

one understood their significance. But none of us ever did.

And that was the point perhaps. We watched them perform more

out of courtesy than anything else. Funny

how we can be conned into doing something

we don’t really want to do just to avoid giving offence. We believe

it’s just for a while, but it ends being a lifetime. And simply

because we believe there is no-one we can turn to

for an alternative vision.

 

3

When the show is over, the audience feel such passion

they decide to re-enact it. They themselves become the actors

or at least genuine copies of them.

 

4

It was past midnight. I was returning to my hotel.

I thought I was alone when I crossed the main square

but a man emerged from the shadows and took my hand.

He led me down alleyways to the banks of the river.

I fell asleep in his arms under the stars.

In the morning he was gone, but he left

the shape of his body in the grass.

 

5

Fingertips reach the tender inside

beyond mere greeting and passing away.

This breath on my face, on my trembling

shoulder blades, the small part of me

which is still open, left over from the wound,

the only place you can enter.

 

6

It isn’t me he’s after but my double, vanishing beside me

in the art of dying until he is no more than a fuzzy outline

on a hazy day in which the sun has become unbearably hot.

 

7

Now I’ve come to a door, but if I knock

it will lead to a series of commitments.

Like being caught in a maze

where one turning commits you to another

but you can’t find the exit

where someone – you don’t know who is waiting.

 

8

I am sitting in the bus station writing a letter to you.

And then there you are in the sunlight in front of me.

‘But what are you doing in this country?’ I ask

almost as if I were disappointed to see you.

You smile with pained eyes.

‘I’ve crossed a continent to find you –

when will you embrace me?’

 

9

Wouldn’t it be wonderful, I asked you

in my dream, if we could meet again

and act as if our lives hadn’t taken place

since the last time?

But you said we needed to go beyond

regret into a kind of dance which in some

measure both contained and overcame that regret.

 

10

The road is made of stones and stories. It merges

with the light ahead. It has mapped

our dreams. How long shall we linger

on its verge, nursing our cut feet, gazing

with affection at old scars?







Ian Seed is the author of several collections of poetry and translation, the most recent of which are Scattering My Mother’s Ashes (Red Ceilings, 2024), Night Window (Shearsman Books, 2024), The Dice Cup (from the French of Max Jacob) (Wakefield Press, 2022), and Operations of Water (Knives, Forks & Spoons Press, 2020). His poetry and essays have appeared in number of anthologies, including Dreaming Awake: New Contemporary Prose Poetry from the United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom (MadHat Press, 2023), The Encounter: A Handbook of Poetic Practice (Parlor Press, 2022), and The Forward Book of Poetry 2017 (Faber & Faber). See www.ianseed.co.uk.


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