sexta-feira, 18 de março de 2016

Leve Pressentimento

Leve Pressentimento

defino-me como um desvio
intencional, à causa
maior

da vida colectiva
peso-me pelas engras
tal curvatura

esquecida do pendor e técnica
de retorno
abordo-me

sem a convicção
da fruta e dos pássaros
que comemos

nos esgares de luz
que entram
a varrer e espreitar, morrendo

desalinhos
de alma, montanhas
gritam-nos alicerces, segredam

o estado côncavo
do espaço
onde não caibo

embora anua em
permanecer
curvo

Irra!

© 2016, José Coelho


quarta-feira, 9 de março de 2016

Improper Prayer

Improper Prayer

cream on my
lap
home made
hussy

this is where ducts drip
oh thirsted
tongues

© 2016, José Coelho


terça-feira, 8 de março de 2016

The Wall

The Wall

At 9pm on the 9th of November
1989
I was standing outside, facing
the tree on the southern
corner of my
home born quarter – one
dog on my right side, probably
licking stuff and
no dog on the left side cause
by the time, I only had
one – me hiding in the shadow's
focal point of a traffic speed
limit sign, wondering
whether my neighbor had eventually
noticed it when
he crashed his motorbike
and him self – luckily
no body else -
becoming from then on what
used to be called
deficient – Oh I remember him alright
two legs and two arms
reaching for the
sky – for the rest of his life
wearing the curse of
his dead arm
and we would swear
to know exactly
where – blood stained on the
big white school wall
broken pieces of metal
and tire still pierced
all around – the impact
took place

little did I
know, how great an achievement
approximately at the same
time
some thousand kms east-wise
a much bigger
and shameless wall
was
finally falling back
to the
ground.

© 2016, José Eduardo Coelho


sábado, 5 de março de 2016

The Boat

*The Boat*

It's dawn. I walk with
the anvil's sound
forging notches
under the skin, my skin
a legion of warriors
rests. So I'm alone
by my self, I walk the steps
of others, towards the same
boat
the same
city of mornings. It's dawn – my blood
withers at your absence -
I wrap my self in a film of mist and cold. No body
next to me, I lean my face
against the quivers
on the glass – white little flowers
keep falling as rain, you
sew your face with mine, your
hands clasp my hands while wheels
keep turning -
the boat's engine
plows the water
methodically forgetting, dissolving
time's froth -
past, present, future -
into one
flowing
river. Its mouth
sets the limit , your breath
wets my chest. Outside the sparkle of
light bends the distant silhouette
of bridges and towers. Your curls
cuddle up to my neck – no body hears
the moans
breaking through miles of
liquid material – invading
the absence
of you. Under my skin
a legion of lovers. The frothiness
at the shoreside -
just a way of saying
the boat.

© 2016, José Eduardo Coelho


Way of Saying

*Way of Saying*

Unlike cats
and budgerigars

Man
(in his blindness)

though striving for
never attains him
self

© 2016, JECoelho


quinta-feira, 3 de março de 2016

The Cheese Patio

The Cheese Patio

Personally, I must confess - during my first rendezvous with Nacho's family I couldn't take my eyes off his younger sister. The whole thing seemed fake and weird. Nevertheless, she was real. And so was the mirror reflecting the opaline glaze of her shoulder blade each time she crossed the room where me and Nacho smoked cigarillos while browsing some old magazines of his recently dead father.
Never mind the whys and how we came to be sharing some space and time together. The fact is I was there and I was irregularly impressed. This family had a strange way of showing their feelings and honoring their dearest relatives. Instead of decorating walls with the classic happy faces theme – holiday scenes, weekend gatherings or casual dailies – theirs were stage to a variety of situations where pain and suffering prevailed.
Starting at the entrance hall and following the left side of the corridor, a collection of metallic silver framed photographs depicted seven bodies in their initial state of what some would call, eternal life. Without any makeup or extra preparations, their skin, their mouths – so real, so white and purple, all dimmed and wrinkled – their expressions, conveyed, to a certain degree, a uniquely inverted attraction on the eyes of the beholder. They were all lying in a simple, neatly arranged bed, with no one else on sight; definitely a private place to be. You could argue there's no suffering nor pain in a death body, the point being the evocations triggered were all about that moment of life when life it self gets so thin it becomes to gauzy to even stand as a question.

Before moving into what he named as The Cheese Patio, he took me to the kitchen to greet his two mothers - as he called them - though one was slightly older. These two ladies, in their modest tartan smocks, cooking and talking, embraced my idea of peace and home – cakes, onion soup and a sweet, intriguing aroma resembling that of lemon myrtle and apple. The freshness of this encounter was cut off on our way out - hanging from spikes stuck in between tiles' knuckles of the opposite wall, were a series of Polaroids taken during the birthing of a child. Rawness and despair were obviously central to the collection; one could almost feel the ache, working, performing visceral changes to the parturient's brain as the child was being slowly delivered. To my disbelieve, at a better look I understood the truly reason of a generalized discomfort and shock: a second baby – a stillborn – wrapped in cloth was resting inside a bowl. At this point, much to my relief, two things happened: I heard my friend's voice calling my name and his sister walked in just as I was walking out.

I saluted and excused my clumsiness, to which she, with a smile, held my hand and led me to the patio where Nacho waited. With curtains half risen and opened windows, the spring light and breeze came all the way in. We sat and talked for awhile. He told me about his father and the tragic events leading to his mental illness. For years he had been an art lover and him self a photographer for some magazines. He picked up a pile from a nearby alcove, inviting me to have a look. There was a table between us and I assume some of the furniture must have been of sandal. I always recognize that smell. A mirror on the central column permitted me to catch a glimpse at a distant doorway. As we flipped through, silence got enhanced by the weight of the day and the occasional quiver of the curtains each time the young lady appeared from behind the door. I enjoyed the moment!

With a magazine on my knees and a cigarillo in my mouth - time running by - memories swept my unthoughts, themselves turning into bizarre pictures hanging in my semi-consciousness. This could have been a nice ending to this visit – which in fact was about to end – if I wasn't to stumble into another gruesome vision. Paula, Nacho's sister, was, with the turn of a page, posing in front of me. Her body, as thin and emptied as sculpted impressions on paper, remained yet beautiful and dear. Her face showed no emotions, no attitude towards life. As I was trying to digest this incompatibility, the door bell rung; Paula came out of her room, passing again through the patio. I could follow her and her sensual body on the mirror, since her far appearance at my rear and then for real, her back side slipping in front of me, as if through my fingers. I can't remember who was announced, but Nacho stood up and we left. She waved a goodbye kiss, which I kept hanging next to other luxury items for awhile. Together, all these wax-like images, sometimes melt and drip, other times they recover solidity. Regardless, they never return to the original form.


© 2016, José Eduardo Coelho