THE CAVERN

x

Mere slips of girls behind masks are hardly what I am after.

But am I that keen on entering this regal, sleeping vagina?

Look what became of the wild boars, swallowed by an unforgiving

Mountain who’d endured a love surrounded by darkness,

Pregnant and alone, somewhere in the depths of Tham Luang. 

x

With her loyal stable hand the princess lost all sense of time.

We smelt the kids before we saw or heard them, said a diver in the party.

Her father had the boy killed. She stabbed herself in the heart

With her hair pin. Dead leaves from above get trapped in newly

Sprouted ones. The bush so threatens modern man it has to be

x

Shaved, infantilised, not for the hill tribe villages to utilise as thatch. 

Light trickles in from the entrance at her labia. A myriad cicadas

Intensify my own alarm. And the heir to the throne, the bright, strong

Princess in a coma? Calm. Remain calm. We must conserve our oxygen.

Parasitic ferns fix their antlers to the trees. I have lost all sense

x

Of open space, for here time is trapped in a cauldron of stone.

Deep inside, the walls go moist and warm. Tham Luang Nang Non,

“The headwaters of the Sleeping Lady,” happens to be the inner lake

Created from her tears, this wide-hipped princess of a mountain

Pregnant with the ghosts of the ones who have succumbed,

x

Drowned in her blood which has become what so fluently now

Flows through her, rising in monsoons, quick to deepen, dangerous,

As their junior football team discovered. Pleased with her mist,

Proud to be forested. Beneath stalactite skirts, the secretive route

They took has many recesses, dead ends, limited passages 

x

And tunnels winding under limestone strata. Free to grow unkempt

The wilderness will reassert itself, a fresh havoc will reign

Where there is now some orderly tea plantation. Offerings of fruit,

Incense and candles may be left. But this is a haunted, not a holy cleft.

Genuflect to her image, yes. Do not remove your sandals.Xx

x

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Jungle

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Does it say ‘Gawow’ or ‘For Real’?

Asian Koel

CHIT CHAT

x

For real, for real, for real.

x

For real, for real, for real, for real.

Who who who who who who who who

Snipped pips, snipped pips, snipped

x

For real, for real, for real?

Who who who who who who who who

Snipped pips, snipped pips, snipped pips?

What? What

Did your poodle do? Did your poodle do

x

For real, for real, for real, for real?

Who who who who who who who who

Snipped pips, snipped pips, snipped

What? What? What

Did your poodle do? Did your poodle do?

We are or were, we are or were

Busy fizzing busy fizzing busy fiz

x

For real, for real, for real.

Who who who who who who who who

Snipped pips, snipped pips, snipped

What? What

Did your poodle do? Did your poodle do?

We are or were, we are or were

Busy fizzing busy fizzing busy fizzing biz –

Quarrel a lot then, quarrel a lot.

x

Ketchup.

Pour it down the bra.

Thank you. Toodle loo

x

For real, for real, for real, for real.

Who who who who who who who?

x

                                (Translated from the Thai)

Big debate with my Thai friend as to what the birds are saying. Of course, they are speaking in Thai, and Thai speakers (with their five tones) “hear” quite differently to the way an English person “hears” – so this poem is more accurately perhaps a transliteration. It’s a dog that keeps saying “What”.

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ACCORDING TO PLINY

The dragon, ever at war with the elephant,

Is itself of so enormous a size,

As easily to overwhelm the elephant,

Seize it in its clutches and encircle

Its legs in its coils.

x

The contest is equally

Fatal to both. The elephant,

Vanquished, falls to the earth,

And by its weight, crushes the dragon

Doggedly knotted around it.

x

For this poem I am indebted to a brilliant post by Annone the Elephant on wordpress

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THE GOOD RAT

x

One Buddha’s seven-headed cobra parasol

Also offers coils for his throne. The Princess and the Pea

Came to mind for somebody, one dry afternoon

x

When the long, refreshingly cool trunk of a python

Got wrapped around my shoulders as it tried to nose away,

As probably did the black snake of which I have no memory,

x

The snake my mum brought back, draped around me

When I was less than a year. Protestant faiths

Only have people to emulate while Shiva balances

x

On the Demon of Ignorance. Vishnu has his bull.

Out of Parvati, possibly sired by her lesser half, let’s say,

Ganesh’s super-stable howdah rides upon a rat.

x

Imagine plump Ganesha seated on his rat sideways

Like those nifty girls in tight skirts hitching a ride to Bangkok,

Except that he sits open wide, cementing together

x

The soles of his feet, fluid in his hips for all his weight.

Here though in the Land of Gold it’s rare to see him riding,

For Ganesh wears the Buddha’s cap, but do I want to direct my trek

x

To the rat temple that Andrea went to in Rajasthan?

The one you have to enter barefoot – as is the form for wats –

But rat-shit everywhere. What pests they are. The Western mind

x

Celebrates its terriers, and shudders at – for all that, the good rat

Can boast its swag-bag share of beady attributes.

Once, on the roof of one of Notre-Dame’s engargoyled towers,

x

There was a girl leant out, her pet rat peering from a shoulder.

In our village many rats in miniature are scattered near

Ganesh’s feet. From a poet’s point-of-view, you get a lot of rhymes.

x

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HOMAGE TO THE DOUANIER ROUSSEAU

x

Steep tracts of dry earth occasionally perplexed by roots

Proceed up the aisles of perpendicular cathedrals.

Bundled pillars of bamboo admit onto chapels of

The unkempt wild banana, larger than a mammoth by

Comparison to its pip-less and domesticated

Cousins. Blanched husks, both Saxon and Norman,

Vie with massive leaves for light’s attention.

Greenly broken leaves get repaired here

With a maze of golden seams as you get in Fittonia.

x

Lancet poison dart plants, bambino arrows and

A foliage plant named Bogner spring up under

Fronds raped by liana – which is spiralled by

Its own far younger strings. The rectilinear kapok

Soars up from its buttresses for vertiginous feet,

Breaking into orange powder right at the summit

Underneath the summit just above it: orange

As the domesticated cur seen near roadside stalls

Coloured the same as the feral dohle that terrorise

x

The hinds and their fawns at the wallow. It’s tricky for

Plantations here, when wild originals contaminate

The heifer versions of themselves with their rampant

Savagery. Monkeys, birds and insects can’t be taught that

Trespass is an offence. They smuggle in the holy

Spirits of the ancient breeds, just as the powerful cult

Of the child who will do one’s bidding generates

Rows kept without official sanction in the abbot’s audience room.

It’s thus that your banana eunuchs suddenly begin

x

To procreate. Crops castrated for the market  

Unpeel auspiciously, only to be found with those unpalatable pips

Even the monkeys spit out and elephants shit.

Not quite as bad as the custard apple though

Enough to deter the Western appetite. You have to go

Back to the Bone Age, when there were wolves but

No Alsatians, when the poison arrow plant

Was still distilled for its point, the time of antler tines,

To worship at the waterfall’s chasm-haunted wat.

x

                                                     Khun Korn

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When Nature Moults

The interrupted fall

Of each broad leaf

Is an event on the sun-deck

Where the skin drinks in the gel.

x

The season’s a sort of dry autumn.

It’s the heat that knocks off the leaves

Big as faces, warped,

And weathered brown.

x

The evergreen bushes

Store what the dew provides

In rind protecting bitter, sweet

Or peppery insides.  

x

Jackfruit and tamarind

Compete against the lime.

The mango gets tested

By jade-breasted, jet-black tits.

x

Elsewhere everything is husks,

Shells of former selves:

A few dark pods

Clinging to the tree-tops.

x

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxChiang Rai, February, 2023 

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My New Partner

Not far from Chiang Rai, Northern Thailand. I’ve met my perfect match.

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Three Thai Poems in the Fortnightly

Here is the link to Three Thai Poems published now in The Fortnightly Review.

This old lady eyed me rather suspiciously as she chewed on some straw.

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Foody Land

The Sunday market manifests an erudite philosophy.

All that may be done shall be done unto your titbits.

x

They shall be toasted wickedly, marinated, roasted.

Bacchanalian bits of things shall be peeled and pickled,

x

Battered, steamed or fried; garnished, peppered, grated.

The texture is to be considered just as much as taste,

x

Crispy, gooey, hard, releasing tart blends of smell,

Not a part from nose to tail shall ever go to waste.

x

And you can but admire how deftly she is dumpling

The pork ball with sesame, trickling fish-oil over the shoal

x

Of desiccated minnows while drizzling the crickets.

Delicious, unless not. Western taste-buds are easily

x

Shocked – or something gets caught in the back of the throat

And you fear that it may be your tonsils you’re swallowing

x

Rather than the intimate glands of some Himalayan goat.

Best of all are the dead man’s fingers, the crocodile tear shallots.

x

Let the market ransack your imagination, turning

Your stomach into your very own haggis. 

x

Hope that the demon’s whiskers do not bring you out in spots.

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