Erika Encore

erica

1. Erika Prepared

Think of erika late at night,
a felt-tip of lipstick red
in a grip to sign her name
on napkins she has no need to
fold, ready-made from the
diner where her breakfast shift
begins by carefully placing it
with hand-drawn hearts
before someone. And they’ve
been caught – not out – but within
its tender eliciting charm,
too soon to be pondering,
as they are now, her preparations
made to casually disarm.

2. Erika Serving Breakfast

If you happen upon
and open the notepad

taken on holiday to
write plans and poetry –

coming across that napkin
with her name –

do not imagine it is more
than a simple thing,

seeming exotic
or suggestive because

you didn’t expect, like the
words bloc steno or

bloc de éspiral, even
spiraalnotablok, because

these too are only language
for the everyday and plain.

Look closely in the
corner and note its

imprint of a coffee stain
that had perhaps

spilt from a breakfast cup
and was wiped to clean.

The hearts? Lipstick?
Imagine Erika late at night,

a pile of these and
signing with red felt,

hoping a tissue of such
tenderness will prompt a tip.

After Las Vegas

Things I
miss:

laughing with
the

elevator
sign

and drinks and
carry-around

sunshine;
bourbon

storytelling
and getting lost

with Sinatra;
monorail

reggae and
Hawaiian hotels;

lost in
drinks

and laughing
with

the
girls –

Stubblefield
too, palm

trees in his
laughing;

trees and
sunshine;

trees and
bourbon

restaurant;
Hawaiian pool

reggae;
keen talk

feelings, and
Frank Sinatra

monorail
riding.

The Election with Single-Use Pencils

In considering
what can be thrown away,
make it the viral

pencil, not a
vote for those with lead in theirs
and other lies

about delivering.
And these are not for colouring in –
so, if within

red walls,
keep yours true and not fooled
by shades

of shadiness:
that politicking of the self,
their mates,

and cronies all.
‘Single-use’ is wonderfully woke, if
awake when you choose.

Colour Poem

em red blue

(source: Edwin Morgan poem from Colour Poems, 1978)

Yesterday would have been Edwin Morgan’s 101st birthday and it marked the end of the Edwin Morgan Centenary celebrations. I was honoured to contribute to the Seculative Books The Edwin Morgan Centenary Collection (detals here).  The Morgan poem prompting mine above, and the others from his Colour Poems booklet, can be read here.

I have just ordered a facsimile copy of Edwin Morgan’s 1982 booklet nine one word poems from Essence Press (Julie Johnson). It looks wonderful and you can order for only £5 here.