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Poem of the Month


Selected by David Underdown who also writes the commentary.

The Fly

She sat on a willow-trunk
watching
part of the battle of Crécy,
the shouts,
the gasps,
the groans,
the trampling and the tumbling.

During the fourteenth charge
of the French cavalry
she mated
with a brown-eyed male fly
from Vadincourt.

She rubbed her legs together
as she sat on a disembowelled horse
meditating
on the immortality of flies.

With relief she alighted
on the blue tongue
of the Duke of Clervaux.

When silence settled
and only the whisper of decay
softly circled the bodies

and only
a few arms and legs
still twitched jerkily under the trees,

She began to lay her eggs
on the single eye
of Johann Uhr,
The Royal Armourer.

And thus it was
that she was eaten by a swift
fleeing
from the fires of Estrées.

Miroslav Holub

Continue reading Issue 66 - September 2016

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