Issue E5 | Poetry | August 2021

Three Poems

Kathleen Bryson

First Person

I’m sure I initially saw you, the mandrill,

in a children’s illustrated photographic book or

possibly in a National Geographic pictorial and

I always think the same thing about your cream teeth and

Union Jack black red and blue mask

I always think the same thing

you are beautiful you are terrifying

I think, all hail the surreal primate troll

I think, the mammal clown with garish smeared soft

greasepaint crayons marking up your mask and

and I always think the same thing

you stalk the textbooks

of anthropology students and teachers and

and I always think the same thing

we the students and I try to think about

misogynist priority of access theories and

and I always think the same thing

you are beautiful like Halloween is beautiful and

and you are terrifying like Halloween is terrifying and

and it’s not October yet and

and it’s the middle of a pandemic and

and it’s what James Baldwin says when

I think about you says more about me

I don’t mean to call myself beautiful but

but perhaps I’m terrifying to others

marked up by lipstick and

and it’s what James Baldwin says when

when I think about you says more about me

alright then you are gorgeous you are beloved

you are witty you are friendly you will live to old age with

with the love of your life have happy grandchildren and

and a German shepherd mix

have the love of your family and

and your friends and the admiration and

and lust of those you desire

you are safe you are healthy you will achieve every

every dream you aspire to achieve you

you will rip off your

my mask

behind it I

you will see

see your

my blue nose your

my red nostrils your

my stripes

Train from Brighton, Several Years Before We Broke Up

A lake superior of bluebells.

The train stopped to let us have a gander.

The purplebells, bluebells had usurped

the traditional green and brown of

forest ground, flooded over the dull

olives and muds, rubber country boots and jackets

woodstuff alchemy to purple and blue

purple and blue

– purple and blue, to me and you –

through the window glass we heard it when

the birds chittered

the train knit-purled to shaky rolls once more

and in a minute we passed into a view of a parking lot,

with no shopping centre to qualify it.

Car upon car upon purple

metal upon blue metal upon red

metal upon silver metal upon yellow

metal inexplicable yet scarab-lovely in its own way

to my newly bluebelled eyes, and

perhaps for you the same,

till the planes flew by and I knew it

for the airport lot it was.

I’m Definitely Missing the Links Here

Proconsul is hypothesised to be

a candidate for the last common

ancestor a deferential potential

abdication to Nyanzipithecus alesi

supplanting notwithstanding.

She arrives in theoretical yesterday through

necromancy in our jungle paradise

el dorado mamilla as a given

to ruminate and birth control

all six living apes, her whole shebang:

humans, chimpanzees, bonobos,

gorillas, orangutans, gibbons.

We usually only see Proconsul

rock-and-roll in the fake

but familiar scala naturae. Debatably good intentions

auxiliar for the story but, as just one defect,

the scale incorrectly shows the state

of primate evolutions as a sole

progression towards adult European

human males as ultimate solutions.

Through an arrow-linear and narrow scale

from the Miocene to the present,

such a directed model of the in-between

is simple and seductive but reductively

stopbottles all other humans and other

animals who are themselves

accrescent from its tiers.

Like all the apes – including us –

Proconsul had no tale.