"Seven bums and fourteen legs,
a brazen ecstasy which begs
the question some of us are asking -
is Peter Goulding multi-tasking?"

Martin Parker, Editor, Lighten Up Online

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Collioure sur mer

Step outside your normal canvas and paint an impressionistic poem. I am paraphrasing imaginary garden with real toads here but that's the prompt. I don't think this really works but I gave it a go anyway.

Laneways cacophonise,
giggling like ruffled matadors in the heat,
their grey matt paving slabs
pounding like drums on a distant island.
Here they came,
Matisse, Derain, Signac,
like moths to a fuzzy light,
shards of slanting sun
singeing their beards and their brushes,
smudging the wave-lapped belltower
in a halitosis haze.
Dead ray and halibut piled up on the quay,
offending the delicate noses
of the bustled hoi-polloi
that patronised and patronised.
Dulce et decorum est,
says the cream-slapped child,
her arms the colour of quicksilver,
snatched up by a worried mother.
The whine of a distant guitar
curls around stockinged legs
and ballgowns rustle like chocolate
in the memory of the sea.
Across the harbour, a parson waved
but I turned and looked for you.



4 comments:

  1. I came here by a circuitous route, but I'm very glad I did. You have created a pointillist poem in impasto, or my name's not Caddoc Trellis! Thank you.

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  2. Oh Hell yeah!!
    I loved this - such unusual word groupings and images: the halitosis haze, and ballgowns rustling like chocolate. This is a great piece which presents an impression rather than a picture-perfect scene...

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  3. Lovely - my favorite part is "that patronised and patronised." That right there speaks volumes about the art world to me.

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