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						LETTERS TO FRIENDS by Barry Tebb 
						
						I
 
  Eddie Linden
  Dear Eddie we’ve not met
  Except upon the written page 
  And at your age the wonder 
  Is that you write at all
  When so many have gone under 
  Or been split asunder by narcissistic humours
  Blunder following blunder
  Barker and Graham, godfathering my verse
  Bearing me cloud-handed to Haworth moor
  From my chained metropolitan moorings,
  O hyaline March morning with Leeds
  At its thrusting best, the thirsty beasts
  Of night quenched as the furnaces
  Of Hunslet where Hudswell Clarke’s locos
  Rust in their skeletal sheds, rails skewed
  To graveyards platforms and now instead
  Skyscrapers circle the city, cranes, aeroplanes,
  Electric trains but even they cannot hinder
  Branches bursting with semen
  Seraphic cloud sanctuaries shunting
  Us homeward to the beckoning moors.
  II
  Brenda Williams
  Leeds voices soothe the turbulence
  ‘Ey’ ‘sithee’ and ‘love’, lastingly lilt
  From cradle to grave, from backstreet
  On the social, our son, beat his way
  To Eton, Balliol, to Calcatta’s Shantiniketan
  And all the way back to a locked ward.
  While I in the meantime fondly fiddled 
  With rhyme and unreason, publishing pamphlets
  And Leeds Poetry Weekly while under the bane
  Of his tragic illness, poet and mother,
  You were driven from pillar to post
  By the taunting yobbery of your family
  And the crass insensitivity of wild therapy
  To the smoking dark of despair,
  Locked in your flat in the Abbey Road
  With seven cats and poetry.
  O stop and strop your bladed darkness
  On the rock of ages while plangent tollings
  Mock your cradled rockings, knock by knock.
   
  III
  Debjani Chatterjee
  In these doom-laden days
  You are steady as a pilot nursing tired ships homeward
  Through churning seas
  Where grey gulls scream
  Forlornly and for ever.
  I am the red-neck,
  Bear-headed blaster
  Shifting sheer rock
  To rape the ore of poetry’s plunder
  Or bulldozing trees to glean mines of silver
  While you sail serenely onward 
  Ever the diplomat’s daughter
  Toujours de la politesse.
  IV
  Daisy Abey
  Daisy, dearest of all, safest
  And kindest, watcher and warner
  Of chaotic corners looming
  Round poetry’s boomerang bends
  I owe you most a letter
  While you are here beside me
  Patient as a miller waiting on wind
  To drive the great sails
  Through summer. 
  When the muse takes over
  I am snatched from order and duty
  Blowing routine into a riot of going
  And coming, blind, backwards, tip
  Over arse, sea waves crashing in suburbia,
  Saturnalia in Sutton, headlines of mad poet
  Striding naked over moors, roaring
  "I am here I am waiting".
  V
  Jeremy Reed
  Niagaras of letters on pink sheets
  In sheaths of silver envelopes
  Mutually exchanged. I open your missives
  Like undressing a girl in my teens
  Undoing the flap like a recalcitrant
  Bra strap, the letters stiff as nipples
  While I stroke the creviced folds
  Of amber and mauve and lick
  As I stick stamps like the clitoris
  Of a reluctant virgin, urgent for
  Defloration and the pulse of orgasm.						 
						
						
						
						
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