I'm delighted to feature a poem by Barry Smith today, taken from Reeling and Writhing (Vole Books, 2023), his most recent collection, which is something of a retrospective. In fact, it includes work written across half a century, encompassing a range of styles from sonnets and songs to mock heroic satire, spinning off ideas from the Sixties to the Twenties!
The poem's title is ‘Supplicant’. It's technically adroit, accumulating details, layering them deftly, gradually drawing us in. Much of its power lies in its use of reportage, never telling the reader what to think. Instead, it juxtaposes observations and invites us to engage with its religious and societal ramifications, lifting what might first appear a mere anecdote into resonant verse. I hope you enjoy it...!
Supplicant
As
if called to midday prayer he hunches
on
all fours, his back turned to the abbey
where
angels and pilgrims blithely
ascend
heavenwards gripping stone ladders
flanking
iron-studded oak doors
while
solemn attendants collect entrance fees.
The
crouching man kneels in convocation,
vision
fully engaged with grey pavement
as
a blackly bristling wire-haired terrier
stands
guarding his singularly suppliant master,
sole
immobility in this crush of busy shoppers
hustling
beneath civic Roman colonnade
rising
in fluted stonework above.
No-one
pauses or seems to witness,
no
hasty handful of change clinks by his side,
only
the pool of liquid spreads
slowly
suppurating the patch
between
recusant dog and man.
Barry
Smith
(first published in Liminal, a Chichester Stanza Anthology)
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